Attractiveness in adult females of Calliphora vomitoria is correlated with ovarian development and there is a marked increase during the previtellogenic and vitellogenic periods. The development of attractiveness may result from the combined actions of ecdysteroids and juvenile hormone. A rise in total hydrocarbons parallels the first increase in levels of these hormones during the previtellogenic stage. Cuticular hydrocarbons subsequently fall, along with the disappearance of hemolymphatic ecdysteroids, and then rise again during the vitellogenic phase of JH production. Increasing and decreasing of some cuticular hydrocarbons, some hydrocarbons implicated in the attractiveness, are correlated with variation of the titer of these hormones, especially JH III.