'Stink flirting' is a thing - just ask a ring-tailed lemur
Send a link to a friend
[April 18, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - For human beings,
"stink flirting" may not sound like a prudent dating strategy. For
ring-tailed lemurs, it is the way to go.
Scientists on Thursday described the results of a comprehensive study of
this behavior - unique in the animal kingdom - that is exhibited by
these primates native to Madagascar.
Male ring-tailed lemurs increase their attractiveness to females by
secreting from glands on their wrists a fruity and floral aroma smelling
similar to a pear, the researchers said.
The behavior dubbed "stink flirting" involves a male rubbing a fragrant
clear liquid that oozes from those glands against his long fluffy tail
and then waving the tail at females. The researchers pinpointed three
compounds responsible for the scent.
"It turns out that the key odorants were not really stinky," said
University of Tokyo biochemistry professor Kazushige Touhara, who led
the study published in the journal Current Biology.
"We can say that the identified odors are strong candidates for sex
pheromones," Touhara said, referring to chemical substances released by
an animal that affects the behavior of other members of its species.
Until now, no pheromones have been identified in any primates, a group
that also includes monkeys, apes and people, Touhara said.
"Although there are many circumstances in which humans utilize olfactory
cues for communication, there is no authentic pheromone that has been
chemically identified," Touhara said.
"I believe there is no classic sex pheromone in humans that elicits
attractive behavior to the opposite sex. But there are probably crucial
odors that affect each other's emotions - for example, a baby's head
smell that parents sniff and feel happy, and a woman's axillary
(underarm) odors that affect the emotions of males."
[to top of second column]
|
Ring-tailed lemurs stand together at the Haifa zoo in northern
Israel March 27, 2010. REUTERS/Baz Ratner/File Photo
Olfactory communication is important for ring-tailed lemurs, which
possess well-developed scent glands on their wrists and shoulders
that they use to mark territory and designate social rank in
addition to romance.
Among primates, lemurs are part of a separate evolutionary lineage
with a keener sense of smell than the group that spans monkeys, apes
and humans.
The researchers found a close relationship between the male hormone
testosterone and the lemur odor compounds. They also found that the
male scent worked its magic only during the breeding season when
females were sexually receptive, as measured by the amount of time
spent sniffing the scent during lab experiments.
Outside of the breeding season, the researchers found, the male
gland secretions smelled different - more bitter and leathery. The
females, the researchers found, showed scant interest in that.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|