The differential attraction by 2 pigeonpea cultivars has been tested through the oviposition behaviour of Heliothis armigera females in a standardized laboratory assay. Seedlings of a susceptible variety (PPE-50) are under choice conditions significantly more attractive at a distance, and without contact allowed other than those of the resistant variety (PPE-45). The volatile signal is contained in the hexane extract from PPE-50 leaves, as shown in the oviposition assay, and after vacuum distillation is present in the more volatile fractions of the mono- and sesquiterpenoids. These compounds, which are also contained in the hexane extracts of 2 more pigeonpea cultivars, a check of medium susceptibility (T-21) and a wild relative (Atylosia scarabaeoides), were compared by capillary gas chromatography. The 4 pigeonpea varieties were characterized by their specific aromagrams, a method which may also advantageously be used in pigeonpea breeding programs.