Hair-pencil

Danaus chrysippus showing hair-pencil at the end of the abdomen

Hair-pencils and coremata are pheromone signaling structures present in lepidopteran males. Males use hair-pencils in courtship behaviors with females. The pheromones they excrete serve as both aphrodisiacs and tranquilizers to females as well as repellents to conspecific males.[1] Hair-pencil glands are stored inside the male until courtship begins, at which point they are forced out of the body by sclerotized levers present on the abdomen.[2] Coremata (the singular form being corema) are very similar structures. Their exact definition is confused by early descriptions but they are more specifically defined as the internal, glandular, eversible structures that bear the hair-pencils and can be voluntarily inflated with hemolymph or air.[3][4]

  1. ^ Hillier, N., & Vickers, N. (2004). The Role of Heliothine Hair-pencil Compounds in Female Heliothis virescens (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) Behavior and Mate Acceptance. Chemical Senses, 6 (29), 499-511.
  2. ^ Birch, M. C., & Poppy, G. M. (1990). Scents and Eversible Scent Structures of Male Moths. Annual review of Entomology (35), 25-58.
  3. ^ Pagden HT (1957). "The presence of coremata in Creatonotus gangis (L.) (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae)". Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society of London A. 32 (4–6): 90–94. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3032.1957.tb00378.x.
  4. ^ Bobera, R., & Rafaeli, A. (2010). Gene-silencing reveals the functional significance of pheromone biosynthesis activating neuropeptide receptor (PBAN-R) in a male moth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 107 (39), 16858-16862.