Arakawa Hiroyuki, Blanchard D Caroline, Arakawa Keiko, Dunlap Christopher, Blanchard Robert J
Pacific Bioscience Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1993 East-West Road, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2008 Sep;32(7):1236-48. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2008.05.012. Epub 2008 May 15.
In rodents, where chemical signals play a particularly important role in determining intraspecies interactions including social dominance and intersexual relationships, various studies have shown that behavior is sensitive to conspecific odor cues. Mice use urinary scent marks for communication with individual conspecifics in many social contexts. Urinary scent involves genetic information about individuals such as species, sex, and individual identity as well as metabolic information such as social dominance, and reproductive and health status, which are mediated by chemical proteins in scent marks including the major histocompatibility complex and the major urinary proteins. The odor of the predator which can be considered to be a threatening signal for the prey also modulate mouse behavior in which scent marking is suppressed in response to the cat odor exposure in mice. These odorant chemicals are detected and recognized through two olfactory bulbs, the role of which in detection of chemosignals with biological relevant appears to be differential, but partly overlapped. Mice deposit scent marks toward conspecifics to maintain their social relationships, and inhibit scent marking in a context where natural predator, cat odor is contained. This suppression of scent marking is long-lasting (for at least 7 days) and context-dependent, while the odorant signaling to conspecifics tends to appear frequently (over 24h but less than 7 days intervals) depending on the familiarity of each signal-recipient. It has been discussed that scent marking is a communicative behavior associated with territoriality toward conspecifics, indicating that the social signaling within species are sensitive to predator odor cues in terms of vulnerability to predation risk.
在啮齿动物中,化学信号在决定种内相互作用(包括社会等级和两性关系)方面起着特别重要的作用,各种研究表明行为对同种气味线索敏感。在许多社会情境中,小鼠利用尿液气味标记与个体同种动物进行交流。尿液气味包含有关个体的遗传信息,如物种、性别和个体身份,以及代谢信息,如社会等级、生殖和健康状况,这些信息由气味标记中的化学蛋白质介导,包括主要组织相容性复合体和主要尿液蛋白质。捕食者的气味可被视为对猎物的威胁信号,它也会调节小鼠的行为,例如小鼠在接触猫的气味后,气味标记会受到抑制。这些气味化学物质通过两个嗅球被检测和识别,嗅球在检测具有生物学相关性的化学信号中的作用似乎有所不同,但部分重叠。小鼠向同种动物留下气味标记以维持它们的社会关系,并在含有天然捕食者猫的气味的环境中抑制气味标记。这种气味标记的抑制作用是持久的(至少持续7天)且依赖于环境,而向同种动物发出的气味信号根据每个信号接收者的熟悉程度往往频繁出现(间隔超过24小时但少于7天)。已经有人讨论过,气味标记是一种与对同种动物的领地意识相关的交流行为,这表明物种内的社会信号在易受捕食风险方面对捕食者气味线索敏感。