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Chemical Senses 2004 29(8):659-669; doi:10.1093/chemse/bjh069
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Chemical Senses Vol. 29 No. 8 © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved

Effects of Vomeronasal Organ Removal on Olfactory Sex Discrimination and Odor Preferences of Female Ferrets

S.K. Woodley, A.L. Cloe, P. Waters and M.J. Baum

Department of Biology, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, USA

Correspondence to be sent to: Dr Michael Baum, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington St, Boston, MA 02215, USA. e-mail: baum{at}bu.edu

Previous research suggests that body odorants, including anal scents and urinary odors, contribute to sex discrimination and mate identification in European ferrets of both sexes. We assessed the possible role of the vomeronasal organ (VNO) in these functions by surgically removing the organ bilaterally in sexually experienced female ferrets. Lesioned (VNOx) and sham-operated control (VNOi) females reliably discriminated between male- and female-derived anal scent gland as well as fresh urinary odors in habituation/dishabituation tests. However, VNOi females spent significantly more time than VNOx subjects investigating male urinary odors in these tests. Also, VNOi females, but not VNOx subjects, preferred to investigate day-old male versus female urine spots as well as wooden blocks that had previously been soiled by male versus female ferrets. Both groups of female ferrets preferred to approach volatile odors from a breeding male instead of an estrous female in Y-maze tests and both groups showed similar levels of receptive sexual behavior in response to a male’s neck grip. The VNO is apparently not required for olfactory sex discrimination or mate recognition in this carnivore, but instead may play a role in promoting continued contact with nonvolatile body odors previously deposited by opposite-sex conspecifics during territorial scent marking.

Key words: carnivore, main olfactory epithelium, mate recognition, pheromone, scent marking


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