Ndiege, I. O.Budenberg, W. J.Karago, F. W.Hansson, B. S.2014-07-312014-07-311993-02Journal of Chemical Ecology February 1993, Volume 19, Issue 2, pp 267-2770098-03311573-1561http://ir-library.ku.ac.ke/handle/123456789/10801DOI 10.1007/BF00993694Male and femaleCosmopolites sordidus were attracted to freshly cut banana rhizome and pseudostem in a still-air olfactometer. Females responded similarly to odors from a comparatively resistant and from a susceptible cultivar of banana, when presented as either freshly cut tissue or as Porapak-trapped volatiles. Females were also attracted to rotting banana pseudostem and to volatiles collected from it. Males and females gave similar responses to host tissue in both the behavioral bioassay and to collected volatiles in EAG recordings. Weevils did not respond, either behaviorally or electrophysiologically, to a synthetic mixture of mono- and sesqiterpenes, which made up over 9% of the volatiles collected from pseudostem.enColeopteraCurculionidaeCosmopolites sordidusbananaweevilMusa sp.pseudostemrhizomeEAGolfactometerBehavioral and electrophysiological responses of the banana weevilCosmopolites sordidus to host plant volatilesArticle