Abstract

The oriental fruit moth (OFM), Cydia (= Grapholitha) molesta, is a highly damaging pest; peaches are its primary host, and pears serve as post-peach secondary hosts during the late season in China. We collected volatiles from detached peach shoots and fruits, and identified them with gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Antennally active compounds were identified by gas chromatography-electroantennogram detection (GC-EAD), and these were further tested in the laboratory and field. We detected consistent electroantennographic activity was for ten compounds. Significantly more C. molesta females were caught with a mixture of female EAD-active compounds identified from the detached matured peach fruits (nonanal, butyl acetate, 3-methylbutyl acetate, hexyl acetate, (Z)-3-hexenyl acetate, linalool and farnesene) than other mixtures mimicking the volatile profile from detached matured fruits or shoots. We identified a new GC-EAD active mixture from intact peach shoots composed of nonanal, (Z)-3-hexenyl acetate, (E)-β-ocimene, and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one. In the field test, the background odour of orchards could affect trap catches, and two peach-derived blends together with two previously known pear-derived blends were proven to be able to monitor the seasonal OFM population dispersal in adjacent orchards. These host plant blends will be effective for further designing candidate attractants for season-long C. molesta population dynamic monitoring.

Highlights

  • The oriental fruit moth (OFM), Cydia (= Grapholitha) molesta, is a highly damaging pest; peaches are its primary host, and pears serve as post-peach secondary hosts during the late season in China

  • The profiles of the detached shoots and fruits consisted of the same chemical classes; total emission quantities were significantly lower in shoots than in fruits across all chemical classes

  • The concentrations of other VOCs, such as hexadecane, nonanal, (Z)-3-hexenyl acetate, and (E, E)-α-farnesene increased with maturation, whereas the concentrations of linalool decreased with maturation (DF)

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Summary

Introduction

The oriental fruit moth (OFM), Cydia (= Grapholitha) molesta, is a highly damaging pest; peaches are its primary host, and pears serve as post-peach secondary hosts during the late season in China. Previous research results have not yet pinpointed groups of VOCs crucial to hosts attractiveness during different phenological stages, which could be used to design synthetic blends for monitoring the oriental fruit moths in the adjacent peach-pear cultivation orchards. Such knowledge would help elucidate mechanisms underlying the seasonal shift of host preference of OFMs from peach to pear, and could be used to explore the new pest management approach under the field condition

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