4.3 Article

Attractant Activity of Host-Related Chemical Blends on the Poultry Red Mite at Different Spatial Scales

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 1-2, Pages 18-35

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10886-022-01399-7

Keywords

Kairomone; Volatile organic compounds; Ammonia; Hematophagous lifestyle; Host-parasite interactions; Field trials

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Blood-feeding arthropods, including mesostigmatic mites, use volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to detect their vertebrate hosts. This study investigated the attractive response of the poultry red mite Dermanyssus gallinae to VOCs emitted by living hens. A blend of 5 VOCs was found to be significantly attractive to D. gallinae, highlighting the importance of chemical interactions in host-parasite relationships and potential for developing alternative control methods.
Many blood-feeding arthropods use volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to detect their vertebrate hosts. The role of chemical interactions in mediating the behavior of hematophagous insects and ticks has been investigated before but remains poorly understood in hematophagous mesostigmatic mites. The poultry red mite Dermanyssus gallinae is an obligatory blood-sucking mesostigmatic mite that feeds on birds and causes damage in poultry farms. We characterized the attractive response of D. gallinae to candidate VOCs previously reported from the odor emitted by living hens. We performed in-vitro choice-test bioassays as well as semi-field and field trials using baited and unbaited traps, in the presence and absence of hens. Among different tested combinations of VOCs, a blend of 5 VOCs (mix1.0) was significantly attractive to our reference population of D. gallinae in vitro, whereas the same individual compounds tested alone were not attractive. Ammonia was attractive on its own and increased the mix1.0 attractiveness. The attractiveness of mix1.0 was confirmed at 'natural' spatial scales in the absence of hens both at the lab and on the farm that provided the reference population. The presence of hens inhibited the mix1.0 attractiveness. The attractive power of mix1.0 was not found in other farms. This research is an important step to advance our understanding of host-parasite interactions in hematophagous mesostigmatic mites and paves the way for developing alternative control tools against D. gallinae by interfering with chemical interactions. Moreover, it underlines the importance of assessing kairomonal activity on different pest populations when developing attract-and-kill systems.

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