Abstract

AbstractAblation of the olfactory bulbs terminates the sexually oriented behavior patterns shown by the male hamster towards the female. All aspects of overt copulatory behavior including mounting are immediately eliminated. Investigatory behavior is decreased significantly and orientation of attention to the hindquarters of the animal being investigated (sexual orientation) is lost over a one to two week interval. This disruption of sexually oriented behavior patterns occurs regardless of the degree of experience of the male in mating prior to the bulbectomy. Unilateral bulbectomy or sham bulbectomy does not disrupt, even temporarily, the mating pattern.Evidence that the lack of mating behavior following bulbectomy is indeed due to anosmia was provided by rendering animals temporarily anosmic by use of zinc sulfate in the nasal cavities. Full recovery of sexual activity occurred within four to six days following this treatment. A second treatment produced a similar result.Naive males, raised in isolation, can show a normal copulatory pattern on first exposure to a receptive female. Naive males do not distinguish between diestrus (non receptive) and estrus (receptive) vaginal secretions from the female.The release of sexual arousal requires olfactory input in the male hamster, conditioning to other cues does not occur. However, differentiation between receptive and non‐receptive females appears to be a positive learned response. The absolute dependence of the male hamster on olfactory cues for sexual arousal has an obvious adaptive value in a species where the female tends to be dominant in encounters and the male, if unable to escape, can be maimed or killed during the course of a fight.

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