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Featured researches published by Sadao Wakamura.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 1996

Reproductive biology of the yellow-spotted longicorn beetle,Psacothea hilaris (pascoe) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). III. Identification of contact sex pheromone on female body surface

Midori Fukaya; Tetsuya Yasuda; Sadao Wakamura; Hiroshi Honda

A major component of female contact sex pheromone of the yellow-spotted longicorn beetle,Psacothea hilaris (Pascoe), was isolated from the elytra and identified as (Z)-21-methyl-8-pentatriacontene. The synthetic compound released the typical mating behavior including holding, mounting, and abdominal bending in males, although its activity was considerably lower than the extract of female elytra when treated on a gelatin capsule as an artificial female model.


Naturwissenschaften | 1992

An amino acid derivative as the sex pheromone of a scarab beetle

Walter S. Leal; Shigeru Matsuyama; Yasumasa Kuwahara; Sadao Wakamura; Makoto Hasegawa

Since the identification of bombykol, a myriad of compounds have been reported as sex pheromones. Nevertheless, as highlighted by the examples of female Lepidoptera, which by and large utilize alcohols, acetates, aldehydes, and hydrocarbons, including epoxyhydrocarbons, pheromones are restricted to some groups of chemicals with marked structural similarities. Even in the Coleoptera, with more diversity in molecular structures, structurally related compounds are used by insects of the same family as evidenced by the scarab beetles; the sex pheromones of Popillia japonica, Anomala rufocuprea, and A. cuprea are (R,Z)-5-( )-(dec1 -enyl)oxacyclopentan-2-one [1], methyl (Z)-tetradec-5enoate [2] and (R,Z)-5-(-)-(oct-l-enyl) oxacyclopentan-2-one [3], respectively. On the other hand, Costelytra zealandica and Kheper lamarcki of the same family have been reported to utilize quite different chemicals, viz., phenol [4] and a mixture of hexadecanoic acid, 2,6-dimethyl-5-heptenoic acid, and (E)-nerolidol along with a polypeptide pheromone carrier [5], respectively. We report here that the large black chafer Holotrichia parallela (Mots.) (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae), ookurokogane in Japanese, utilizes a unique sex pheromone, L-isoleucine methyl ester. H. parallela is an important agricultural pest in Japan, which was initially called Lachnosterna morosa Waterhouse [6] and later renamed [7].


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2000

Geographical variation in female sex pheromones of the rice leaffolder moth, Cnaphalocrocis medinalis: identification of pheromone components in Japan

Kei Kawazu; Junichi Hasegawa; Hiroshi Honda; Yukio Ishikawa; Sadao Wakamura; Hajime Sugie; Hidemi Kamiwada; Takeshi Kamimuro; Yukata Yoshiyasu; Sadahiro Tatsuki

Sex pheromone components of the Japanese rice leaffolder moth, Cnaphalocrocis medinalis Guenée (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) were identified from ovipositor extracts of virgin females as (Z)‐11‐octadecenal, (Z)‐13‐octadecenal, (Z)‐11‐octadecen‐1‐ol and (Z)‐13‐octadecen‐1‐ol at a ratio of 11:100:24:36 by GC‐EAD, GC, GC‐MS. The total amount was estimated to be ca.0.9 ng/female. Field bioassays in Kagoshima, Japan, showed that the two aldehydes are essential for male attraction and the alcohols may have a synergistic effect on the aldehydes. A rubber septum containing 0.9 mg of the four components at the natural ratio was shown to be an effective lure for monitoring this pest in Japan. The above four components are quite different from the sex pheromone components reported previously for the same species of either Philippine or Indian origin; components were shown to be (Z)‐11‐hexadecenyl acetate and (Z)‐13‐octadecenyl acetate at a ratio of 98:2 in the Philippine blend and 1:10 in the Indian blend. Furthermore, in the field tests in Japan, neither the Philippine blend nor the Indian blend showed any attractive activity, while the Japanese blend attracted significant numbers of male moths. These results suggest that there are remarkable geographical variations in the sex pheromone composition of this species or there are several distinct species using different sex pheromone blends.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 1996

Phoretic egg parasitoid,Telenomus euproctidis (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae), uses sex pheromone of tussock mothEuproctis taiwana (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae) as a kairomone

Norio Arakaki; Sadao Wakamura; Tetsuya Yasuda

The phoretic egg parasitoid,Telenomus euproctidis Wilcox (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) was found more frequently on virgin than on mated female moths ofEuproctis taiwana (Shiraki) (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae), when virgin and mated moths were exposed concurrently in the field for 24 hr. A synthetic component of the moths sex pheromone. (Z)-16-methyl-9-heptadecenyl isobutyrate, attracted both the wasp,T. euproctidis, and maleE. taiwana. These findings suggest thatT. euproctidis uses the sex pheromone of the female moth,E. taiwana, as a kairomone to locate a host female moth and through her the host eggs.


Zoological Science | 2002

Intraspecific Variation of Cuticular Hydrocarbon Composition in Formica japonica Motschoulsky (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

Toshiharu Akino; Mamoru Terayama; Sadao Wakamura; Ryohei Yamaoka

Abstract Cuticular hydrocarbons and morphological features were compared among 80 Formica japonica colonies collected in Japan. Although a few morphological differences were found in workers among the colonies, four different types of cuticular hydrocarbon composition were observed. This was supported by a principal component analysis. We further compared the cuticular hydrocarbons among a total of approximately 400 F. japonica colonies, and categorized the hydrocarbon components into four types based on the result of discriminant analyses for the first 80 colonies. Type 1 was observed in colonies mainly collected in southern Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu. Types 2, 3, and 4 were from colonies with primary collections in Southern Honshu, central and Pacific coast northern Honshu, and the Sea of Japan coasts of northern Honshu and Hokkaido, respectively. The occurrence of four distinct types of CHC composition suggests that the colonies that produce them are separate species.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2004

Visual and olfactory cues for mate orientation behaviour in male white-spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca

Midori Fukaya; Toshiharu Akino; Tetsuya Yasuda; Hiroe Yasui; Sadao Wakamura

Olfactory and visual cues were shown to mediate short‐distance orientation in Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). In a laboratory test, more than 80% (n = 42) of males walked straight upward when presented with an untreated surface with a 75° slope. When a freshly killed female was fixed at a short distance (10 cm ahead and 5 cm to left/right) from the starting point, 50% of males (n = 30) were oriented toward the female before direct contact. Similar behavioural responses were observed when female extract was directly applied to the slope or to a glass rod model fixed on the slope. When black, white, and transparent coloured rods with the extract were presented, the orientation response was significantly greater for black than to white and transparent rods, to which only a negligible response was observed.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2003

Ketone components in the contact sex pheromone of the white‐spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca, and pheromonal activity of synthetic ketones

Hiroe Yasui; Toshiharu Akino; Tetsuya Yasuda; Midori Fukaya; Hiroshi Ono; Sadao Wakamura

Two active fractions were found during the isolation of contact sex pheromone of female elytra of the white‐spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), in addition to fraction of hydrocarbons that had previously been identified. One fraction was essential to evoke a series of precopulatory behaviors of males toward a glass dummy when coated together with the hydrocarbon blend. The other fraction enhanced this activity when added to the mixture. From the latter synergistic fraction, we isolated five novel compounds and identified them as 10‐heptacosanone, (Z)‐18‐heptacosen‐10‐one, (18Z,21Z)‐heptacosa‐18,21‐dien‐10‐one, (18Z,21Z,24Z)‐heptacosa‐18,21,24‐trien‐10‐one, and 12‐heptacosanone by GC‐MS and NMR analyses. A blend of four of these synthetic ketones, without 12‐heptacosanone, in the ratio and concentration found in female elytra extract (250 : 400 : 1000 : 180 ng FE−1) showed greater synergistic effect than the natural fraction containing the ketones. This effect was canceled out by further addition of 12‐heptacosanone (100 ng FE−1), which was still comparable to the effect of the natural ketone fraction.


Physiological Entomology | 2008

Presence of larval and adult diapauses in a subtropical scarab beetle: graded thermal response for synchronized sexual maturation and reproduction

Seiji Tanaka; Fumiko Yukuhiro; Hiroe Yasui; Midori Fukaya; Toshiharu Akino; Sadao Wakamura

Abstract The white grub Dasylepida ishigakiensis has a 2‐year life cycle and spends approximately 9 months as a nonfeeding larva, pupa and adult on a subtropical island. Evidence is presented indicating that this beetle has two diapauses that appear to synchronize this long life cycle with the seasons. Larvae exposed to 20, 22.5, 25 and 27.5 °C late in the third (last) stadium pupate rapidly except for some individuals kept at the highest temperature. The latter pupate upon transfer to 22.5 °C, indicating that larval diapause is maintained at high temperature but terminates upon transfer to a lower temperature. Pupal development is directly temperature‐dependent in the range 20–30 °C. Adults develop reproductive organs (i.e. the ovary in females and the seminal vesicles and accessory glands in males) rapidly at 15 and 20 °C, whereas those kept at 25 °C take a long time to do so. Ovarian development is completely suppressed at 30 °C but initiated upon transfer to 20 °C. In the laboratory, males with well‐developed reproductive organs mate even with sexually immature females, whereas females with undeveloped ovaries show no sexual behaviour. Although the two diapauses of this species are thermally regulated (i.e. a characteristic commonly expressed by insects in summer diapause), adults of this beetle emerge from pupae late in the autumn and remain in the soil for 2 months. Adult diapause effectively serves to synchronize the time of sexual maturation with the coldest month of the year.


Chemoecology | 2004

Diet-induced chemical phytomimesis by twig-like caterpillars of Biston robustum Butler (Lepidoptera: Geometridae)

Toshiharu Akino; Ken-ichi Nakamura; Sadao Wakamura

Summary. Polyphagous caterpillars of the giant geometer Biston robustum resemble the twigs of their respective food sources in color and shape. Common predatory ants, including Lasius and Formica, were often observed to freely prowl directly on caterpillars’ bodies, even after antennal contact. This suggests that the cuticular chemicals of the caterpillars resemble those of the twigs of the foodplants, so we analyzed both by GC and GC-MS. The chemical compositions differed among caterpillars fed on a cherry, Prunus yedoensis, a chinquapin Castanopsis cuspidata, and a camellia Camellia japonica. The cuticular chemicals of the caterpillars resembled those of their corresponding food sources. When the caterpillar diets were switched from the cherry to camellia or chinquapin at the 4th instars, the caterpillars’ cuticular chemicals changed after molting to resemble those of their respective foods. Caterpillars also changed their cuticular chemicals when they perched on cherry twigs and fed on camellia or chinquapin leaves, but not when they perched on camellia or chinquapin twigs and fed on cherry leaves. The chemical similarities between the caterpillars and the twigs were due to the digestion of host leaves, which indicates that this is a diet-induced adaptation.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2008

Mating Disruption for Control of Melanotus okinawensis (Coleoptera: Elateridae) with Synthetic Sex Pheromone

Norio Arakaki; Atsushi Nagayama; Aya Kobayashi; Yasuhiro Hokama; Yasutsune Sadoyama; Noriaki Mogi; Mitsunobu Kishita; Ken Adaniya; Kenjiro Ueda; Motoaki Higa; Toshinobu Shinzato; Hiroshi Kawamitsu; Shigeru Nakama; Sadao Wakamura; Kohji Yamamura

Abstract A mating disruption experiment to control Melanotus okinawensis Ohira (Coleoptera: Elateridae) was conducted at a sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) field and a wild Japanese pampas, Miscanthus sinensis Anderss, grassland on Minami-Daito Island (3,057 ha) from 2001 to 2007. The sugarcane field and the pampas grassland were treated with synthetic sex pheromone that evaporated from a polyethylene tube dispenser. The mean total catches obtained by monitoring traps in the sugarcane fields decreased by 96.1% in 2001 from the previous year on Minami-Daito Island. The mean total trap catches in the treated area further decreased by 74.0% from 2001 until 2007 as cumulative effects. Simultaneously, the number of adults captured by hand decreased from 4.7 per sugarcane field in 2001 to 0.5 in 2007 (89.3% reduction), whereas those captured in the untreated area (Miyagi Island) did not show such a decrease. The mating rates were significantly lower in the females captured in the treated area (14.3–71.4%) than those in the untreated area (96.9–100%). However, the amount of the decrease in the trap catches was relatively small at first (39.6% reduction) in the Japanese pampas grassland on the periphery of the Island. This was probably due to the loss of pheromone substance caused by the strong seasonal wind in the periphery. However, mean total trap catches at the periphery also decreased within several years; significant decreases were detected until 2003, 2006, and 2007. These results indicated that the mating disruption effectively reduced an isolated population of M. okinawensis.

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Norio Arakaki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Tetsuya Yasuda

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Toshiharu Akino

Kyoto Institute of Technology

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Hiroe Yasui

Ministry of Agriculture

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Hiroe Yasui

Ministry of Agriculture

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Seiji Tanaka

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Nao Fujiwara-Tsujii

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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