Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils

GC/MS analysis of essential oils extracted from four Cymbopogon species revealed that the majors compounds were trans-p-mentha-1(7),8-dien-2-ol (21.9%), cis-p-mentha-1(7),8-den- 2-ol (19.4%), trans-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (9.6%), cis-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (7.2%), cis-pmenth-2-en-1-ol (7.2%), limonen...

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Autores principales: Bothon, F., Gnanvossou, D., Noudogbessi, J., Hanna, R., Sohounhloue, D.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76409
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author Bothon, F.
Gnanvossou, D.
Noudogbessi, J.
Hanna, R.
Sohounhloue, D.
author_browse Bothon, F.
Gnanvossou, D.
Hanna, R.
Noudogbessi, J.
Sohounhloue, D.
author_facet Bothon, F.
Gnanvossou, D.
Noudogbessi, J.
Hanna, R.
Sohounhloue, D.
author_sort Bothon, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description GC/MS analysis of essential oils extracted from four Cymbopogon species revealed that the majors compounds were trans-p-mentha-1(7),8-dien-2-ol (21.9%), cis-p-mentha-1(7),8-den- 2-ol (19.4%), trans-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (9.6%), cis-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (7.2%), cis-pmenth-2-en-1-ol (7.2%), limonene (6.3%) in C. giganteus; piperitone (68.4%); ?-2-carene (11.5%) and ?-eudesmol (4.9%) in C. schoenanthus, while citronellal (41.6%); geraniol (28.2%); citronellol (12.6%) and geranial (41.3%); neral (33.0%); myrcene (10.4%), geraniol (6.5%) were recorded in C. nardus and C. citratus, respectively.Tephritid fruit flies use both olfactory and visual cues to seek food and ovipositional resources. Olfactive effects for C. citratus, C. nardus, C. giganteus and C. schoenanthus essential oils on melon fly (B. cucurbitae) were evaluated using a four-arm olfactometer. The results showed that C. giganteus and C. schoenanthus repel mostly the fruit fly B. cucurbitae, compared with C. nardus and C. citratus and that female and male B. cucurbitae responded similarly to odours emitted from all essential oils evaluated. The number of pupae collected from zucchini treated with C. giganteus was significantly lower than that collected from zucchini treated with C. nardus when exposed to female B. cucurbitae, regardless of the concentrations.
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spelling CGSpace764092025-12-08T09:54:28Z Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils Bothon, F. Gnanvossou, D. Noudogbessi, J. Hanna, R. Sohounhloue, D. chemical compounds cymbopogon olfactory organs cucurbit vegetables GC/MS analysis of essential oils extracted from four Cymbopogon species revealed that the majors compounds were trans-p-mentha-1(7),8-dien-2-ol (21.9%), cis-p-mentha-1(7),8-den- 2-ol (19.4%), trans-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (9.6%), cis-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (7.2%), cis-pmenth-2-en-1-ol (7.2%), limonene (6.3%) in C. giganteus; piperitone (68.4%); ?-2-carene (11.5%) and ?-eudesmol (4.9%) in C. schoenanthus, while citronellal (41.6%); geraniol (28.2%); citronellol (12.6%) and geranial (41.3%); neral (33.0%); myrcene (10.4%), geraniol (6.5%) were recorded in C. nardus and C. citratus, respectively.Tephritid fruit flies use both olfactory and visual cues to seek food and ovipositional resources. Olfactive effects for C. citratus, C. nardus, C. giganteus and C. schoenanthus essential oils on melon fly (B. cucurbitae) were evaluated using a four-arm olfactometer. The results showed that C. giganteus and C. schoenanthus repel mostly the fruit fly B. cucurbitae, compared with C. nardus and C. citratus and that female and male B. cucurbitae responded similarly to odours emitted from all essential oils evaluated. The number of pupae collected from zucchini treated with C. giganteus was significantly lower than that collected from zucchini treated with C. nardus when exposed to female B. cucurbitae, regardless of the concentrations. 2013 2016-08-12T06:27:25Z 2016-08-12T06:27:25Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76409 en Open Access application/pdf Bothon, F., Gnanvossou, D., Noudogbessi, J., Hanna, R. & Sohounhloue, D. (2013). Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils. Journal of Natural Products, 6:147-155.
spellingShingle chemical compounds
cymbopogon
olfactory organs
cucurbit vegetables
Bothon, F.
Gnanvossou, D.
Noudogbessi, J.
Hanna, R.
Sohounhloue, D.
Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils
title Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils
title_full Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils
title_fullStr Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils
title_full_unstemmed Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils
title_short Bactrocera Cucurbitae response to four Cymbopogon species essential oils
title_sort bactrocera cucurbitae response to four cymbopogon species essential oils
topic chemical compounds
cymbopogon
olfactory organs
cucurbit vegetables
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76409
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