Abstract

Carotenoids of 47 species of insects belonging to Hemiptera, including 16 species of Sternorrhyncha (aphids and a whitefly), 11 species of Auchenorrhyncha (planthoppers, leafhoppers, and cicadas), and 20 species of Heteroptera (stink bugs, assassin bugs, water striders, water scorpions, water bugs, and backswimmers), were investigated from the viewpoints of chemo-systematic and chemical ecology. In aphids, carotenoids belonging to the torulene biosynthetic pathway such as β-zeacarotene, β,ψ-carotene, and torulene, and carotenoids with a γ-end group such as β,γ-carotene and γ,γ-carotene were identified. Carotenoids belonging the torulene biosynthetic pathway and with a γ-end group were also present in water striders. On the other hand, β-carotene, β-cryptoxanthin, and lutein, which originated from dietary plants, were present in both stink bugs and leafhoppers. Assassin bugs also accumulated carotenoids from dietary insects. Trace amounts of carotenoids were detected in cicadas. Carotenoids of insects belonging to Hemiptera well-reflect their ecological life histories.

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