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Male mouse (Mus musculus) attraction to airborne urinary odors of conspecifics and to food odors: Effects of food deprivation.
Authors:Nyby, John   Kay, Edwin   Bean, N. Jay   Dahinden, Zeno   Kerchner, Michael
Abstract:
Five experiments demonstrated that 112 male mice were strongly attracted to the urinary odors of females, and that male urinary odors were considerably less attractive. The strong attraction to female urinary odors did not require that the males have postweaning experience with females. Males with continuous access to food and water were much more strongly attracted to female urinary odors than to the airborne food odors. Female urinary odors remained more attractive than food odors after 24-hr food deprivation, and only after 48-hr deprivation did the attractiveness of food odors approximate that of female urine. Although 48-hr food deprivation appeared to equalize the attractiveness of urinary and food odors, this regimen did so not by diminishing the attractiveness of female urine but rather by increasing the attractiveness of food odors. It is argued that the attraction that male mice exhibited to female urinary odors in this odor-testing apparatus reflected, at least in part, a biologically important precopulatory communication system. (29 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved)
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