0000000000885545

AUTHOR

Daisuke Umemoto

showing 1 related works from this author

An inhibitory sex pheromone tastes bitter for Drosophila males

2007

1932-6203 (Electronic) Journal Article; Sexual behavior requires animals to distinguish between the sexes and to respond appropriately to each of them. In Drosophila melanogaster, as in many insects, cuticular hydrocarbons are thought to be involved in sex recognition and in mating behavior, but there is no direct neuronal evidence of their pheromonal effect. Using behavioral and electrophysiological measures of responses to natural and synthetic compounds, we show that Z-7-tricosene, a Drosophila male cuticular hydrocarbon, acts as a sex pheromone and inhibits male-male courtship. These data provide the first direct demonstration that an insect cuticular hydrocarbon is detected as a sex ph…

Malelcsh:MedicineEvolutionary Biology/Sexual BehaviorInsectCourtshipToxicologySexual Behavior Animal0302 clinical medicineMatingSex Attractantslcsh:Science[SDV.BDD]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Development Biologymedia_commonAnimal biologyNeurons0303 health sciencesPhysiology/Sensory SystemsSex CharacteristicsMultidisciplinaryNeuroscience/Behavioral Neurosciencebiology[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyBiologie du développementDevelopment Biology3. Good healthCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterSex pheromoneTastePheromoneDrosophila melanogasterSex characteristicsResearch Articleanimal structuresGenotypemedia_common.quotation_subject03 medical and health sciencesCaffeineBiologie animaleEcology/Behavioral EcologyAnimalsHomosexuality MaleLighting030304 developmental biologyEvolutionary Biology/Animal Behaviorlcsh:Rfungibiology.organism_classificationSex Attractantslcsh:Q030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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