Abstract

Chemical communication is important for many species of mammals. Male brown bears, Ursus arctos, mark trees with a secretion from glands located on their back. The recent discovery of pedal glands and pedal-marking at a site used for tree-rubbing led us to hypothesize that both types of marking form part of a more complex communication system. We describe the patterns of chemical communication used by different age and sex classes, including differences in the roles of these classes as information providers or receivers over four years at a long-term marking site. Using video recordings from a camera trap, we registered a total of 285 bear-visits and 419 behavioral events associated with chemical communication. Bears visited the site more frequently during the mating season, during which communication behaviors were more frequent. A typical visit by male bears consisted of sniffing the depressions where animals pedal mark, performing pedal-marking, sniffing the tree, and, finally, rubbing against the trunk of the tree. Adult males performed most pedal- and tree-marking (95% and 66% of the cases, respectively). Males pedal-marked and tree-rubbed in 81% and 48% of their visits and sniffed the pedal marks and the tree in 23% and 59% of visits, respectively. Adult females never pedal marked, and juveniles did so at very low frequencies. Females rubbed against the tree in just 9% of their visits; they sniffed the tree and the pedal marks in 51% and 21% of their visits, respectively. All sex and age classes performed pedal- and tree-sniffing. There were significant associations between behaviors indicating that different behaviors tended to occur during the same visit and were more likely if another individual had recently visited. These associations leading to repeated marking of the site can promote the establishment of long-term marking sites. Marking sites defined by trees and the trails leading to them seem to act as communication hubs that brown bears use to share and obtain important information at population level.

Highlights

  • Marking behavior is essential in the mediation of chemical communication and social interactions in mammals (Johansson & Jones, 2007)

  • Our study site is located in an area with high quality habitat for brown bears (Naves et al, 2003), including denning and mating areas, areas used by females with cubs, and vegetation offering plenty of resources used during hyperphagia, when bears feed continuously in preparation for hibernation

  • In this work we show that the chemical communication behavior of brown bears at tree-rubbing sites is more complex than previously recognized, with pedal-marking being an integral part of this communication system

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Summary

Introduction

Marking behavior is essential in the mediation of chemical communication and social interactions in mammals (Johansson & Jones, 2007). More specialized chemical compounds may provide detailed information on the individual, including their sex and reproductive status (Alberts, 1992) They are produced by specialized holocrine, apocrine and/or eccrine skin glands, often located in the anal, subcaudal, interdigital skin, and chin areas, among others. The presence of long-lasting marks of multiple individuals in a marking area may promote the synergy between different types of signals, potentially eliciting several communication-related behaviors (Sumpter & Brännström, 2008). These complexities make some particular types of marking sites especially important in the regulation of social behavior. The repeated use by multiple individuals for long periods of time convert these marking sites into communication hubs at a population level (King et al, 2017)

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