Sex pheromone of the Asian corn borer moth

1980 
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 (Hubner), 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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