Biologists
deciphering
complex
lemur
scent
language
Posted
August
16
Duke
University
DURHAM,
N.C.
—
A
"stink
fight"
between
ring-tailed
lemurs
might
be
dead
serious
to
them.
But
to
observers,
the
scented
struggle
ranks
among
the
more
odd,
even
comical
sights
at
the
Duke
University
Primate
Center
—
already
renowned
for
the
biological
eccentricities
of
its
exotic
denizens
Preparations
for
battle
begin
when
male
combatants
load
their
"weapons"
—
vigorously
rubbing
their
tails
against
their
shoulders
and
between
their
wrists,
infusing
the
fur
with
scent
from
glands
there.
So
armed
—
or
tailed
—
they
launch
their
attacks,
feathery
tails
arched
over
their
backs,
ears
flattened
and
squeaking
warnings.
They
relentlessly
flick
their
tails
at
one
another
until
one
of
the
adversaries
comes
to
his
scentses,
gets
the
odiferous
message
and
retreats.
But
until
the
research
of
Duke
biologist
Christine
Drea
and
student
Elizabeth
Scordato,
scientists
had
no
idea
what
chemical
messages
were
being
wafted
back
and
forth
in
such
fights.
More
broadly,
they
have
not
understood
the
complex
"language"
of
multiple
scents
that
lemurs
use
to
communicate
a
variety
of
messages
from
aggression
to
mating
receptiveness.
In
fact,
until
Drea
and
Scordato
began
their
studies,
scientists
didn't
even
appreciate
that
ringtails,
and
perhaps
other
lemurs,
may
well
have
the
richest
scent
language
of
any
primates.
They
may
communicate
not
just
individual
chemical
words,
but
in
essence,
"scentences"
—
combinations
of
scents
that
extend
the
animals'
chemical
communications
repertoire.
The
scientists'
studies
—
in
which
they
are
assiduously
sampling
and
analyzing
lemur
scents
and
testing
behavioral
responses
to
those
scents
—
were
inspired
by
Drea's
continuing
research
on
olfactory
communication
in
spotted
hyenas
which
are
sophisticated
communicating
animals.
"Until
now,
there
had
been
general
studies
on
lemur
scent-marking
patterns
including
sex
and
seasonal
differences,"
said
Drea,
who
is
an
assistant
professor
of
biological
anthropology
and
anatomy.
"But
we
wanted
to
look
at
the
problem
in
more
depth.
We
wanted
to
explore
the
possibility
of
scent
signatures,
how
animals
respond
to
different
odors,
and
whether
they
are
communicating
different
messages
using
the
different
scent
glands."
The
researchers
knew
that
more
evolutionarily
advanced
New
World
monkeys
communicate
using
scent
marking.
But
there
was
evidence
that
the
more
primitive
lemurs
might
actually
be
more
advanced
in
their
chemical
communications.
Said
Scordato,
"Lemurs
are
unique
among
primates
because
most
of
the
higher
primates
—
including
the
Old
World
monkeys
and
apes
--
aren't
particularly
olfactorily
equipped.
They
use
more
visual
communications
in
their
social
groups.
So,
the
prosimians
represent
sort
of
a
more
primitive
branch
of
the
primate
tree,
and
they're
more
similar
to
species
such
as
rodents
in
terms
of
olfactory
communication
playing
a
very
important
part
of
their
social
behavior."
Prosimians
are
primates
whose
ancestors
branched
off
from
the
primate
evolutionary
family
tree
before
monkeys
and
apes.
Scordato
has
now
graduated
and
is
continuing
her
research
as
a
staff
member
in
the
Department
of
Biological
Anthropology
and
Anatomy.
Said
Drea,
"We
thought
that
ringtails
were
particularly
interesting
because
the
males
have
different
kinds
of
scent
glands,
and
they
use
them
in
different
ways
—
perhaps
the
most
diverse
scent
language
in
primates."
The
animals
have
such
glands
in
their
genital
regions
and
on
wrists
and
shoulders.
"Potentially,
animals
might
respond
to
the
different
kinds
of
scent
marks
in
different
ways.
So,
we
wanted
to
see
if
there
were
messages
encoded
in
the
specific
glands.
"We
knew
these
secretions
varied
in
properties,"
said
Drea.
"The
males'
wrist
gland
gives
off
a
low
volume
of
clear
liquid.
And
the
shoulder
gland
produces
a
thick
brown
paste.
And
both
male
and
female
genital
glands
produce
a
sticky
goo
that
females
might
mix
with
urine,
and
which
might
have
an
effect
on
the
message
the
female
is
encoding."
Scordato
performed
two
kinds
of
studies
to
understand
lemur
scent
communications.
She
recorded
the
rates
of
different
kinds
of
scent
marking
by
the
animals
over
a
year,
to
link
different
kinds
of
markings
with
different
purposes.
And,
she
took
monthly
samples
from
the
animals'
scent
glands
and
analyzed
them
using
instruments
in
the
Department
of
Chemistry.
These
studies
have
revealed
the
"scent
profiles"
that
the
animals
are
using
in
their
chemical
communications.
Now,
the
scientists
are
identifying
the
specific
compounds
that
make
up
those
profiles.
To
learn
the
meaning
of
this
chemical
language
to
the
lemurs,
Drea
and
Scordato
are
launching
studies
in
which
they
will
present
a
given
scent
to
a
specific
animal
at
a
specific
time
of
year
and
observe
the
reaction.
"This
approach
gives
us
the
control
of
presenting
the
scent
in
a
controlled
way
to
a
specific
individual,"
said
Drea."
For
example,
she
said,
the
scents
can
be
presented
so
they
can
only
be
smelled,
or
both
smelled
and
tasted
—
which
might
be
an
important
olfactory
communication
pathway.
The
researchers
already
know
from
their
behavioral
observations
that
males
seem
to
form
"scentences,"
said
Drea.
"When
males
mark,
they
mark
either
only
with
the
wrist
gland,
or
they
will
go
through
a
rubbing
motion
and
mix
the
secretions
of
the
shoulder
gland
with
the
secretions
of
the
wrist
gland,
and
then
deposit
that,"
said
Drea.
"So,
one
of
our
big
questions
is
whether
there's
a
difference
between
wrist
marking
and
shoulder/wrist
marking?
What
are
the
different
messages
encoded?
Does
the
shoulder
gland
have
a
specific
function
in
terms
of
message,
or
is
it
acting
as
sort
of
a
fixative
for
the
more
volatile
components
of
the
wrist
gland?"
Also,
said
Drea,
there
are
indications
that
the
same
scenting
behavior
might
have
a
different
meaning
at
a
different
time.
For
example,
male
tail-waving
might
be
used
not
just
for
stink
fighting,
but
as
a
"valentine."
"Our
behavioral
studies
showed
an
increase
in
tail-waving
by
males
during
the
breeding
season
—
maybe
a
sort
of
'Hey
ladies,
here
I
am!'"
said
Drea.
Also,
she
said,
scents
may
be
as
much
a
signature
as
a
statement.
"Scent
marks
might
encode
a
sort
of
individual
signature
of
an
animal,
asserting
who
they
are
and
their
social
attachments
and
dominance
status,"
she
said.
To
complicate
their
studies,
the
researchers
have
found
that
the
composition
of
a
lemur
scent
also
appears
not
to
be
static.
"We
found
seasonal
changes
in
the
composition
and
complexity
of
an
odor,"
said
Drea.
"So,
it
could
be
that
the
same
scent
component
may
be
part
of
a
different
'cocktail'
that
communicates
one
signal
at
one
time
of
the
year
to
males,
versus
a
different
kind
of
message
to
females
at
another
time
of
the
year."