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Abstract

In 2003–2004, a trapping study with multiple-funnel traps was conducted in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Louisiana to evaluate the effects of the bark beetle pheromones ipsenol, ipsdienol, and lanierone on catches of bark beetles and associated species. The results on bark and ambrosia beetles have been reported previously. Herein, we report on the responses of predators in the same study. Ipsenol and/or ipsdienol attracted several species of coleopteran predators: Enoclerus nigripes (Say) (Cleridae); Temnoscheila virescens (F.) (Trogossitidae); Lasconotus species (Zopheridae); Corticeus species (Tenebrionidae); and Platysoma attenuatum LeConte, Platysoma cylindricum (Paykull), and Platysoma parallelum (Say) (Histeridae). Lanierone was not attractive alone, nor did it enhance trap catches of any of these predator species. In Georgia, lanierone interrupted attraction of E. nigripes to traps baited with ipsenol. We highlight that the use of lanierone appears to be restricted to three Ips species in the subgenus Ips (Bonips). Further research on the general role of lanierone in the chemical ecology of bark beetles and predators should be conducted over a broad geographic range.

Keywords: lanierone; ipsenol; ipsdienol; predators; bark beetles
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Contributor Notes

Corresponding author (email: daniel.miller1@usda.gov).
Current address: USDA Forest Service, Forest Health Protection, 1720 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Georgia 30309 USA.
Received: Jan 27, 2024
Accepted: Mar 09, 2024