Pheromones have been successfully used on a large scale for control of pink bollworm, Pectinophora gossypiella, by mating disruption in Egypt and Pakistan using various slow release formulations. Similar formulations are being developed for control of other cotton bollworms, Earias insulana and E. vittella. Small-scale trials are in progress to evaluate pheromone formulations for control of sugar-cane borers, Chilo sacchariphagus and C. auricilius in Mauritius and India, and the tropical warehouse moth, Ephestia camelia, as a pest of stored cocoa in Brazil. Traps baited with the pheromone of the African armyworm, Spodoptera exempta, have been extensively used in Eastern and Southern Africa as the basis of a forecasting system of pest incidence.
Traps baited with the synthetic aggregation pheromone of the larger grain borer, Prostephanus truncatus, have been developed and are in use in E and W Africa for detection and monitoring of this pest of stored grain.