Floral scent emissions from Asarum yaeyamense and related species
The flowers of Asarum are usually regarded as scentless or sometimes to have a foul odor. Recently, we noticed that Asarum yaeyamense, endemic to Iriomote Island, Japan, has a floral fragrance with a distinct “fruity note.” To determine the chemical characteristics of this fragrance and whether “non...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biochemical systematics and ecology 2010-08, Vol.38 (4), p.548-553 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The flowers of
Asarum are usually regarded as scentless or sometimes to have a foul odor. Recently, we noticed that
Asarum yaeyamense, endemic to Iriomote Island, Japan, has a floral fragrance with a distinct “fruity note.” To determine the chemical characteristics of this fragrance and whether “non-scented”
Asarum species emit any volatiles, we collected floral scents of
A. yaeyamense and related species (
A. lutchuense,
A. hypogynum,
A. fudsinoi,
A dissitum,
A. tokarense, and
A. senkakuinsulare) using headspace methods and analyzed these scents by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). The results indicated that
A. yaeyamense mainly emitted α-cedrene (tentatively identified), an unidentified sesquiterpene, methyl tiglate, and manoyl oxide (tentatively identified). Methyl tiglate may be a source of the “fruity note” in the
A. yaeyamense fragrance. We also detected emissions of volatiles, mainly sesquiterpenes, from some “non-scented”
Asarum species. This study constitutes a rare case of the detection of the emission of a diterpene (manoyl oxide) as a floral scent volatile. |
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ISSN: | 0305-1978 1873-2925 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bse.2010.06.002 |