News Release 08-106
Where Are You Now, My Love?
Discovery related to Japanese beetles' sex pheromones has implications for agricultural pest control
June 24, 2008
View a video interview with chemical ecologist Walter Leal.
This material is available primarily for archival purposes. Telephone numbers or other contact information may be out of date; please see current contact information at media contacts.
Having a good nose is essential to a Japanese beetle's survival. The beetle's sense of smell helps it avoid enemies and zero in on a mate. Meanwhile, the potential mate is programmed to release sex pheromones in exactly the right proportions. Like cheap perfume, there is such a thing as too much: Excessive pheromones can get the attention of a passing fly, leading her to the beetle. The fly can then lay her eggs on the beetle's back, setting up emerging fly larvae for their first meal (fresh Japanese beetle).
If all of this isn't challenging enough, the male beetles have to track females while they're both flying. This requires a mechanism within the males that loses the pheromone scent from a moment before and picks up the latest scent as the females move through the air.
This mechanism is well understood by Walter Leal, a chemical ecologist at the University of California, Davis. With funding from the National Science Foundation, Leal has isolated, identified, cloned and expressed a pheromone-degrading enzyme that allows receptors in the beetle's nose to lose the pheromone scent from the female's earlier locations as she moves to new places.
Isolating this enzyme offers the potential to eliminate entirely the beetle's reception of the pheromone scent, making them unable to find females, mate and reproduce. This potential could be useful to agricultural pest control, since the Japanese beetle is an invasive species responsible for millions in damages to crops each year.
To learn more, go to the UC Davis press release.
-NSF-
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View Video
Walter Leal discusses the mechanisms surrounding the sex pheromones of Japanese beetles.
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The Japanese beetle is responsible for more than $450 million in damage annually to trees and crops.
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Media Contacts
Maria C. Zacharias, NSF, (703) 292-8070, email: mzachari@nsf.gov
Kathy Keatley Garvey, University of California, Davis, (530) 754-6894, email: kegarvey@ucdavis.edu
Principal Investigators
Walter Leal, University of California, Davis, email: wsleal@ucdavis.edu
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