Journal article

Fatty acids derived from oviposition systems guide female black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens) toward egg deposition sites


Authors listKlüber, P; Arous, E; Jerschow, J; Fraatz, M; Bakonyi, D; Rühl, Martin; Zorn, H

Publication year2024

Pages1231-1248

JournalInsect Science

Volume number31

Issue number4

ISSN1672-9609

eISSN1744-7917

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7917.13287

PublisherWiley


Abstract

The black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens, comes with big promises for industrial purposes since its larvae feed polyphagously on a broad spectrum of organic substrates. However, research focusing on adult flies is scarce, which is inconsistent with their reproductive relevance within the rearing cycle. In particular, directed oviposition is a challenge in artificial systems. Currently, decomposing organic matter is commonly used as oviposition substrate, which has extensive potential for improvement in view of the lack of standardization and the risk of microbial contamination. Here, we identified three fatty acids and one fatty acid methyl ester derived from the surface of old oviposition sites and targeted to elucidate their effect on preference behavior and oviposition site selection using Y-olfactometry and prepared oviposition sites, respectively. Exposure to tetradecanoic acid attracted gravid females and stimulated oviposition most strongly, while decanoic acid demonstrated a repulsive effect. Females kept in mixed-sex populations were attracted by tetradecanoic acid, resulting in a higher egg mass found in the compound box (3.0–11.4 fold), a ≥ 2.3 fold reduction of nonspecifically deposited eggs, and the highest total egg mass. Conversely, decanoic and dodecanoic acid caused females to lay a greater proportion of eggs nonspecifically outside both boxes. Our data suggest that fatty acids, especially tetradecanoic acid, are important cues for oviposition site selection in black soldier flies. In order to achieve a directed oviposition behavior, the role of further short- and long-chain fatty acids as attractants should be examined.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKlüber, P., Arous, E., Jerschow, J., Fraatz, M., Bakonyi, D., Rühl, M., et al. (2024) Fatty acids derived from oviposition systems guide female black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens) toward egg deposition sites, Insect Science, 31(4), pp. 1231-1248. https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7917.13287

APA Citation styleKlüber, P., Arous, E., Jerschow, J., Fraatz, M., Bakonyi, D., Rühl, M., & Zorn, H. (2024). Fatty acids derived from oviposition systems guide female black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens) toward egg deposition sites. Insect Science. 31(4), 1231-1248. https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7917.13287


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:58