Research Group of Behavioural Ecology, Institute of Biology, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
Junior Research Group of Primate Kin Selection, Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Am J Primatol. 2019 Jul;81(6):e22976. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22976. Epub 2019 May 15.
Olfaction is important across the animal kingdom for transferring information on, for example, species, sex, group membership, or reproductive parameters. Its relevance has been established in primates including humans, yet research on great apes still is fragmentary. Observational evidence indicates that great apes use their sense of smell in various contexts, but the information content of their body odor has not been analyzed. Our aim was therefore to compare the chemical composition of body odor in great ape species, namely Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii (Lesson, 1827), one adult male, five adult females, four nonadults), Western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla (Savage, 1847), one adult male, two adult females, one nonadult), common chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes (Blumenbach, 1775), four adult males, nine adult females, four nonadults), and bonobos (Pan paniscus (Schwarz, 1929), two adult males, four adult females, two nonadults). We collected 195 samples (five per individual) of 39 captive individuals using cotton swabs and analyzed them using gas chromatography mass spectrometry. We compared the sample richness and intensity, similarity of chemical composition, and relative abundance of compounds. Results show that species, age, and potentially sex have an impact on the variance between odor profiles. Richness and intensity varied significantly between species (gorillas having the highest, bonobos the lowest richness and intensity), and with age (both increasing with age). Richness and intensity did not vary between sexes. Odor samples of the same species were more similar to each other than samples of different species. Among all compounds identified some were associated with age (N = 7), sex (N = 6), and species-related (N = 37) variance. Our study contributes to the basic understanding of olfactory communication in hominids by showing that the chemical composition of body odor varies across species and individuals, containing potentially important information for social communication.
嗅觉在动物王国中非常重要,它可以传递关于物种、性别、群体成员或生殖参数等信息。嗅觉的重要性在包括人类在内的灵长类动物中已经得到了证实,但对大型类人猿的研究仍然很零散。观察证据表明,大型类人猿在各种情况下都使用它们的嗅觉,但它们的体臭信息含量尚未得到分析。因此,我们的目的是比较不同大型类人猿物种(即苏门答腊猩猩[Pongo abelii (Lesson, 1827)],1 只成年雄性、5 只成年雌性、4 只未成年个体;西部低地大猩猩[Gorilla gorilla gorilla (Savage, 1847)],1 只成年雄性、2 只成年雌性、1 只未成年个体;普通黑猩猩[Pan troglodytes (Blumenbach, 1775)],4 只成年雄性、9 只成年雌性、4 只未成年个体;以及倭黑猩猩[Pan paniscus (Schwarz, 1929)],2 只成年雄性、4 只成年雌性、2 只未成年个体)的体臭化学组成。我们使用棉签收集了 39 只圈养个体的 195 个样本(每个个体 5 个样本),并使用气相色谱-质谱联用仪进行了分析。我们比较了样本丰富度和强度、化学组成的相似性以及化合物的相对丰度。结果表明,物种、年龄,以及潜在的性别对气味特征的差异有影响。物种之间的丰富度和强度差异显著(大猩猩的丰富度和强度最高,倭黑猩猩的最低),并且随着年龄的增长而增加。性别之间的丰富度和强度没有差异。同一物种的气味样本比不同物种的气味样本更相似。在所有鉴定出的化合物中,有一些与年龄(N=7)、性别(N=6)和物种相关的(N=37)差异有关。我们的研究通过表明体臭的化学组成因物种和个体而异,包含了可能对社会交流很重要的信息,为理解人类的嗅觉交流提供了基础。