Abstract

Chemical signaling between animals of the same species is common among vertebrates. We have reported this phenomenon in the gray short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis domestica (Wagner, 1842). We now find that male opossums investigate odors derived from the mandibular and flank regions and from urine of male and female opossums and from the sternal gland of male opossums significantly more than distilled water. Males investigate female odors significantly more than male odors. They also investigate strange male odors significantly more than their own odors when similar body parts were compared. The males investigate female flank odors significantly longer than female urine odors when these were paired, but the time spent investigating other pairings of female odors was not significantly different. Furthermore, experimental males, unlike females tested in former studies, discriminate between urine of male and of female conspecifics when compared with water control. We hypothesize that male opossums require information about the presence of male conspecifics that recently traversed their home range to avoid potential conflicts. Urine from diestrous females signals the proximity of a female that has not already mated.

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