kairomone

English

WOTD – 10 November 2022

Etymology

A great spruce bark beetle (Dendroctonus micans). Bark beetles produce pheromones to communicate with each other, but some of these act as kairomones which draw predatory beetles to feed on them.

Blend of Ancient Greek καιρός (kairós, advantage; profit, noun) + English pheromone,[1] coined in the 1970 article “Allomones and Kairomones: Transspecific Chemical Messengers” by the American geneticist William Lacy Brown, Jr. (1913–1991), the German-American ecologist and entomologist Thomas Eisner (1929–2011), and the American ecologist Robert Harding Whittaker (1920–1980) which was published in BioScience: see the quotation.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈkaɪɹə(ʊ)məʊn/
  • (file)
  • (General American) IPA(key): /ˈkaɪɹəˌmoʊn/
  • Hyphenation: kai‧ro‧mone

Noun

kairomone (plural kairomones)

  1. (biochemistry, ecology) Any substance produced by an individual of one species (often an insect) that benefits the recipient which is of a different species but is harmful to the producer. [from 1970]

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References

  1. Compare kairomone, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, June 2020; kairomone, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

Further reading

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