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Attraction of bark beetles (Coleoptera : Scolytidae) to a pheromone trap - Experiment and mathematical models

Helland, Inge S. ; Hoff, Jann Morten and Anderbrant, Olle LU (1984) In Journal of Chemical Ecology 10(5). p.723-752
Abstract

The movement of bark beetles near an attractive pheromone source is described in terms of mathematical models of the diffusion type. To test the models, two release experiments involving 47,000 marked spruce bark beetles [Ips typographus (L.)] were performed. The attractive source was a pheromone trap, surrounded by eight concentric rings with eight passive trap stations on each ring. Captures were recorded every 2-10 minutes for the pheromone trap and once for the passive traps. The models were fitted to the distribution in time of the central pheromone trap catch and to the spatial distribution of catch among the passive traps. The first model that gives a reasonable fit consists of two phases: Phase one-After release the beetles move... (More)

The movement of bark beetles near an attractive pheromone source is described in terms of mathematical models of the diffusion type. To test the models, two release experiments involving 47,000 marked spruce bark beetles [Ips typographus (L.)] were performed. The attractive source was a pheromone trap, surrounded by eight concentric rings with eight passive trap stations on each ring. Captures were recorded every 2-10 minutes for the pheromone trap and once for the passive traps. The models were fitted to the distribution in time of the central pheromone trap catch and to the spatial distribution of catch among the passive traps. The first model that gives a reasonable fit consists of two phases: Phase one-After release the beetles move according to a diffusion process with drift towards the pheromone trap. The strength of the drift is inversely proportional to the distance from the traps. Phase two-those beetles attracted to, but not caught by, the pheromone trap are no longer influenced by the pheromone, and their movement is described by a diffusion process without drift. In phase two we work with a loss of beetles, whereas the experiment seems to indicate that the loss of beetles in phase one is negligible. As a second model, the following modification of phase one is considered: After release the beetles move according to a diffusion process without drift, until they start responding to the pheromone (with constant probability per unit time), whereafter they start moving according to a diffusion process with drift. This study, like other release experiments, shows that the efficiency of the pheromone trap is rather low. What is specific for the present investigation is that we try to explain this low efficiency in terms of dynamic models for insect movement. Two factors seem to contribute: Some beetles do not respond to pheromone at all, and some beetles disappear again after having been close to the pheromone trap. It also seems that the motility of the beetles decreased after they ceased responding to the pheromone. Furthermore, the data lend some support to the hypothesis that flight exercise increases the response of the beetles to pheromone.

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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
keywords
Coleoptera, diffusion, dispersal, Ips typographus, marking, model, pheromone, recapture, release, Scolytidae, trap
in
Journal of Chemical Ecology
volume
10
issue
5
pages
30 pages
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:0000504371
ISSN
0098-0331
DOI
10.1007/BF00988539
project
Olfaction in bark beetles
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d84071d7-39ee-4dfb-97cd-d9f3cb0b3c3d
date added to LUP
2020-05-28 08:24:07
date last changed
2021-05-23 05:27:33
@article{d84071d7-39ee-4dfb-97cd-d9f3cb0b3c3d,
  abstract     = {{<p>The movement of bark beetles near an attractive pheromone source is described in terms of mathematical models of the diffusion type. To test the models, two release experiments involving 47,000 marked spruce bark beetles [Ips typographus (L.)] were performed. The attractive source was a pheromone trap, surrounded by eight concentric rings with eight passive trap stations on each ring. Captures were recorded every 2-10 minutes for the pheromone trap and once for the passive traps. The models were fitted to the distribution in time of the central pheromone trap catch and to the spatial distribution of catch among the passive traps. The first model that gives a reasonable fit consists of two phases: Phase one-After release the beetles move according to a diffusion process with drift towards the pheromone trap. The strength of the drift is inversely proportional to the distance from the traps. Phase two-those beetles attracted to, but not caught by, the pheromone trap are no longer influenced by the pheromone, and their movement is described by a diffusion process without drift. In phase two we work with a loss of beetles, whereas the experiment seems to indicate that the loss of beetles in phase one is negligible. As a second model, the following modification of phase one is considered: After release the beetles move according to a diffusion process without drift, until they start responding to the pheromone (with constant probability per unit time), whereafter they start moving according to a diffusion process with drift. This study, like other release experiments, shows that the efficiency of the pheromone trap is rather low. What is specific for the present investigation is that we try to explain this low efficiency in terms of dynamic models for insect movement. Two factors seem to contribute: Some beetles do not respond to pheromone at all, and some beetles disappear again after having been close to the pheromone trap. It also seems that the motility of the beetles decreased after they ceased responding to the pheromone. Furthermore, the data lend some support to the hypothesis that flight exercise increases the response of the beetles to pheromone.</p>}},
  author       = {{Helland, Inge S. and Hoff, Jann Morten and Anderbrant, Olle}},
  issn         = {{0098-0331}},
  keywords     = {{Coleoptera; diffusion; dispersal; Ips typographus; marking; model; pheromone; recapture; release; Scolytidae; trap}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{723--752}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Journal of Chemical Ecology}},
  title        = {{Attraction of bark beetles (Coleoptera : Scolytidae) to a pheromone trap - Experiment and mathematical models}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00988539}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/BF00988539}},
  volume       = {{10}},
  year         = {{1984}},
}