Abstract
By 1975, insect sex pheromones had been identified from 60 species (1) of moths (Lepidoptera), and nearly all of the 40 compounds involved had been found to be mono- or di-unsaturated C 10 to C 18 straight-chain aldehydes, alcohols, or acetates, and the sites of olefinic unsaturation were, with one exception (2), at odd-numbered positions in the carbon chain. Since that time, many more lepidopteran pheromone components have been identified, and mono-unsaturated compounds with unsaturation at even-numbered positions in the carbon chain remain extremely rare (3–6). However, in females of Ostrinia furnacalis (Guenee), called the Asian corn borer, we have discovered another mono-olefinic lepidopteran sex pheromone that has the site of unsaturation at ab even carbon position. Females of this corn-pest species produce a ca . 1:1 geometric mixture of ( Z )- and ( E )- 12-tetradecen-1-o1 acetate to attract and sexually stimulate males. On the other hand, the nearest taxonomic relative (7) of the Asian corn borer, the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner), uses a mixture of ( Z )- and ( E )-11-tetradecen-1-o1 acetate as its sex pheromone (8). Biochemical explanation of the paucity of monounsaturated moth sex pheromones with olefinic sites at even numbered carbon positions remains to be elucidated.
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