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Odors as cues for orientation to mothers by weanling Virginia opossums
Authors:Donna J. Holmes
Affiliation:(1) Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts;(2) Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, 29802 Aiken, South Carolina
Abstract:Three experiments were conducted to investigate whether wholebody and pouch odors facilitate social cohesion between young Virginia opossums and their mothers just prior to weaning. In experiment 1, young oriented toward plastic buckets containing their mothers, directing significantly higher levels of investigative behavior and more distress vocalizations toward them than toward buckets containing unrelated lactating females. In experiment 2, young oriented toward and investigated empty buckets containing whole-body odors of their mothers more than empty buckets containing odors of other females. Similarly, more investigative behavior was directed toward plastic bucket lids containing pouch odors from subjects' mothers than toward pouch odors from unrelated females in experiment 3. These results suggest that social odors help young didelphid marsupials maintain contact with their mothers, as in other mammals, and that whole-body and pouch gland odors are important chemical signals in this nongregarious species.
Keywords:Didelphis virginiana  Didephidae  maternal-young recognition  maternal odors  pouch glands  Virginia opossum
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