Responses of tsetse Glossina morsitans morsitans and Glossina pallidipes (Diptera: Glossinidae) to host-derived phenolic kairomones were investigated using a wind tunnel. Activation behaviour of G. m. morsitans depended on the mixture of the phenols but not on the dose or ratio of the blend used. Up wind orientation behaviour and actual contact with the odour source depended on both the phenolic mixture and on the ratio of the phenols in the blend. In the present studies, a 4:1 blend of 4-cresol and 3-n-propylphenol, respectively, consistently induced more of the flies to fly upwind and contact the odour source as compared to any other combination of the phenols or even when these two crucial phenols were mixed in a ratio of 9:1; the ratio in which they are found in a typical sample of buffalo urine.
Comparison of the responses of the two species indicate that significantly fewer G. m. morsitans fly upwind and contact the odour source on stimulation with a blend of 4-cresol and 3-n-propylphenol as compared to G. pallidipes. This may explain why phenols only produce small improvements in the catches of G. m. morsitans as compared to G. pallidipes.
The simple wind tunnel developed, not only provides a useful tool for rapidly screening candidate attractants, but also a means to investigate how various compounds alone or in various combinations affect tsetse behaviour.