Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Avian 'Axe effect' attracts attention of females and males
20 July 2011 [20:31] - Today.Az
In a case of life imitating art, avian scents given off by male songbirds have the females (and males) flocking in.
A Michigan State University researcher revealed the process of how
males draw attention to themselves through chemical communication in the
current issue of Behavioral Ecology. Scents are used in all organisms
for many purposes, such as finding, attracting and evaluating mates. But
this is the first study of its kind that demonstrates that it is
happening among songbirds, said Danielle Whittaker, managing director of
MSU's BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action.
Body-spray commercials feature young men dousing themselves with
fragrance and -- voila -- hordes of beautiful women or even bands of
angels descend upon them. Male birds deploy a similar tactic when they
release their cologne -- or preen oil -- secreted from a gland at the
base of their tail. It not only works to attract the attention of female
birds, but it also has the unintended effect of attracting males as
well.
"It's kind of like the 'Axe effect,' in that females were attracted
to the scent and didn't seem to care where it came from, meaning their
own population or a different one -- even though birds in these
populations look and behave differently," Whittaker said. "And I think
the males were drawn in as an aggressive response to the scent of
another male."
Traditionally, songbirds have been written off in terms of using
their sense of smell because they have the smallest olfactory bulbs
relative to brain size among all birds. Recently, however, researchers
have discovered that songbirds harbor a high number of olfactory
receptors, and they've been able to prove that the birds are capable of
using odors to help find their way.
So, Whittaker and her collaborators in Ellen Ketterson's lab at
Indiana University weren't surprised to discover that the birds used
scent in attracting mates. Some eyebrows were raised, though, when they
learned how attractive the scent was across populations and sexes.
Another interesting find was that when given a choice, the female birds
preferred the odor of the smaller males, Whittaker said.
"However, in a previous study, when they got to see the actual birds,
they tended to prefer larger males with larger plumage ornaments," she
said. "Based on these results, I'm hoping to find out how and why small,
unattractive males overcompensate by producing greater amounts of an
attractive scent."
MSU's BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action, a National
Science Foundation-funded Science and Technology Center, has partners at
North Carolina A&T State University, University of Idaho,
University of Texas at Austin and University of Washington. /Science Daily/
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