Abstract

Abstract: The internal and external morphology of the female sex pheromone gland in Cameraria ohridella Deschka & Dimic, an European pest on Aesculus hippocastanum L., has been investigated by histological and electron microscopic techniques. The gland consists of a single layer of modified epidermal cells in the dorsal part of the intersegmental membrane between the eighth and ninth abdominal segments and laterally extends to the posterior apophyses. The epithelium contains large columnar‐ and cone‐shaped cells with basally situated nuclei. The cuticle, which covers the glandular region, has a wrapped appearance and is divided into a hyalin and thickened endocuticle and a thin outer epicuticle: it considerably expands when the gland is protruded and provides a sufficiently large surface for evaporation of the pheromone. The cuticle does not show any orifices of pore channels. In the retracted position, the gland is folded within the body cavity of the seventh and eighth abdominal segments but is exposed to the environment by extension of the abdominal tip along with female calling. In virgin females, pheromone glands are well developed at least within the first days after eclosion; if copulation occurs, glandular epithelia degenerate soon. According to the current classification, the glandular type of C. ohridella most easily is consistent with eversible dorsal scent folds that are widely distributed amongst diverse taxa of Lepidoptera. However, this is the first report on the morphology of pheromone glands in the Gracillariidae.

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