Context: Ips typographus, a major pest of Norway spruce (Picea abies) in Europe, is experiencing more frequent outbreaks due to climate change. These outbreaks involve shifts in population dynamics and phenotypic traits, influencing beetle responses to olfactory cues from stressed host trees. Aims: The study examines the size-dependent behavioral and antennal responses of female I. typographus to two host selection-deciding volatiles with contrasting ecological roles: 1,8-cineole, which inhibits attraction to unsuitable trees, and (+)-isopinocamphone, a pheromone synergist. Size-linked morphological and olfactory adaptations may influence females\' ability to select suitable host trees for reproduction. Methods: In field trap experiments conducted in 2019 and 2022, the body size of I. typographus females caught in response to different doses of (+)-isopinocamphone or 1,8-cineole in combination with pheromone was compared. Female Ips typographus were sorted based on body length, the size of the antennal club was measured, and size-dependent antennal responses to these volatiles were analyzed using electroantennography. Results: Larger females were more attracted to (+)-isopinocamphone in combination with pheromone in the field, showed stronger antennal detection, and had proportionally larger antennal clubs than smaller females. In contrast, smaller females were less repelled by 1,8-cineole added to pheromone but, in contradiction, antennally detected it more strongly than larger females despite having smaller antennal clubs. Conclusion: The total body length significantly influences semiochemical detection in I. typographus females. (+)-isopinocamphone was detected more effectively by larger females, implying an advantage in the selection of suitable host trees. In contrast, the discrepancy between behavioral and antennal responses to 1,8-cineole in smaller females suggests the involvement of not only peripheral detection but also central nervous processing of olfactory signals driving behavior. This adaptation may enable smaller females to reduce competition with large ones by selecting less suitable trees. These findings provide new insights into the ecological relationship between beetle morphology and olfactory cues, with implications for tree-bark beetle interactions.