Identification of female and male
sex pheromones in the solitary bee Osmia rufa (Hymenoptera:
Megachilidae)
M. Ayasse¹,
G. Dutzler¹, F. Schiestl¹, F. Ibarra² & W. Francke²
¹Inst. of Zoology,
Althanstrasse 14, 1090 Vienna, Austria; ²Inst. of Organic
Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Hamburg, D-20146
Hamburg, Germany
The reproductive
biology of the solitary bee Osmia rufa has been well
studied, in order to investigate this species’ potential for crop
pollination. Almost no data exist so far on the chemical
communication involved in the mating biology. Males search for
receptive females at feeding areas and nests. Most females of this
monandrous species mate immediately after having emerged.
Therefore, it should be an advantage for males to distinguish
between receptive and unreceptive females. Males show a
characteristic post-copulatory behaviour of rubbing the female
wing surfaces with their sternites, which leads to the hypothesis
that they mark the females with an antiaphrodisiac. In behavioural
experiments, combined gas chromatography - electroantennography
recordings (GC-EAD) and chemical analyses, we studied the function
of female and male pheromones in mating biology. Bioassays with
different samples obtained from attractive females showed extracts
of the cuticular surface to be most attractive, indicating that
the female sex pheromone is evidently located there. In GC-EAD
analyses of surface extracts, we found that fatty acids, ethyl
esters, hydrocarbons and aldehydes triggered receptor potentials
in the antennae of males. Odourless dummy bees impregnated with
synthetic compounds mixed according to the proportions found on
the cuticular surface of unmated females were significantly more
attractive to males than dummies impregnated with solvent only. In
bioassays, O. rufa males clearly distinguished between
newly emerged females and those that mated one or two days prior
to a dual-choice experiment. Chemical analyses showed different
odour bouquets of unmated and mated females and the total amount
of odour decreased within three days after mating. The assumption
that males mark females during copulation with an antiaphrodisiac,
that is produced in the sternal glands, was confirmed by means of
behavioural experiments, GC-EAD analyses and chemical analyses.
Solvent extracts of wings obtained from just mated females yielded
an increase of the total amount of odour as compared to that of
unmated females and many of the main chemical compounds identified
in the male sternal glands contributed to this increase. In
dual-choice experiments, unmated females impregnated with sternal
gland extracts proved significantly less attractive than females
impregnated with solvent only. In a further bioassay we identified
Ethyl (Z)-7-hexadecenoate as a male antiaphrodisiac. Supported by
a grant of the FWF Austria (P09773-BIO).
Index terms:
Osmia rufa, mating biology, chemical communication
Copyright: The copyrights of
this original work belong to the authors (see right-most box in
title table). This abstract appeared in Session 4 – CHEMISTRY
AND PHYSIOLOGICAL ECOLOGY Symposium and Poster Session, ABSTRACT
BOOK II – XXI-International Congress of Entomology, Brazil,
August 20-26, 2000.
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