Multimodal fertility cues in chimpanzees: How body odours complement sexual swellings
Kuecklich, M.; Zetzsche, M.; Dolotovskaya, S.; Siepmann, J. W.; Schmidt, L.; Wiesner, C.; Weiss, B. M.; Widdig, A.
Show abstract
To attract mating partners, female mammals communicate their reproductive status through one or multiple sensory modalities, providing redundant or complementary information. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) are an excellent model for studying multimodal communication. Exaggerated sexual swellings of females serve as a visual proxy for ovulation but increased male mating interest during maximum swelling suggests that olfactory cues may pinpoint fertility more accurately than the swelling alone. Here, we combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, hormonal analyses, and bioassays to examine (1) whether chemical composition of female anogenital odours changes during the fertile period, and (2) whether males are able to detect these changes. Our results suggest that, in addition to prominent olfactory changes associated with swelling stages, chemical cues provide complementary information regarding the timing of the fertile window. These changes, however, are minor compared to those related to swelling stages. Male behavioural responsiveness in bioassays was too low to draw conclusions regarding their ability to detect these subtle shifts when presented with a chemical cue only. Overall, our findings support the existence of a multimodal fertility cue in chimpanzees, wherein visual signals are complemented by subtle olfactory changes indicating the timing of the fertile period.
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