Abstract
In spite of the importance of feces in scent marking and intraspecific chemical communication of many mammals, only a few studies have examined the chemical constituents of feces that could have a signaling function. We described here the chemicals found in feces recently deposited in the wild by adult and pup Iberian wolves (Canis lupus signatus). By means of analyses using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS), we identified 77 compounds in feces of adult wolves, mainly heterocyclic aromatic organic compounds, such as indole or phenol, but also steroids, such as cholesterol, carboxylic acids and their esters between n-C3 and n-C18, aldehydes, alcohols and significant quantities of squalene and α-tocopherol, which would increase the chemical stability of feces on humid substrates. Some of the odoriferous compounds are very likely originated in the anal-sac secretions, and later incorporated onto feces during defecation. However, the abundance of the main odoriferous compounds in feces could be explained by the result of the bacterial action on food components. Feces of pups only had 26 compounds, most of these were also found in adults’ feces, but four compounds were only found in pups’ feces, and there were also age-related differences respect to the proportions of shared chemicals. These differences could be partly due to the absence of anal-sac glands in pups, which would not need to scent mark substrates.
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