Ground squirrels use their own odors to reconstruct family relationships after hibernation.
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Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

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WHO ARE YOU?Spring is a time when ground squirrels emerge from hibernation and get reacquainted with their kin. Scent is the tool they use. A new study suggests how a ground squirrel knows who smells like kin and who doesn’t. Full story.Mateo SNOWBIRD, UTAH
— Wake up and smell the armpit.
That’s basically what Belding’s ground squirrels do in spring
when hibernation has wiped out their memory of their society’s smells, says
Jill Mateo of the University
of Chicago. Using their
own body odors as reference points, the ground squirrels figure out anew each
year who’s kin and who’s not.
Self-sniffing as a guide to kinship has earned the nickname
“armpit effect.” Biologists have theorized that plenty of animal species rely
on their armpits when they do favors for kin or avoid relatives as mates. “There’s
tantalizing evidence for the armpit effect in people,” Mateo says, but ruling
out other possible explanations has been tricky in any species.
Armpit effects could
certainly tip off any hibernation-fuddled ground squirrel to who’s a relative.
But there’s an alternative explanation: that the animal learns the smell of mom
and littermates in childhood, thus constructing a family-scent template for
kinship.
“Kin recognition is the basis of a lot of our theory of the
evolution of social behavior,” said behavioral ecologist Jan Randall of San Francisco State University.
She welcomes Mateo’s work as helping to reveal the mechanisms for such an
important capacity.
Mateo took the fresh approach of switching baby ground
squirrels into foster families at birth and then testing them after hibernation.
Her results put Spermophilus beldingi
ground squirrels among only a handful of examples for which experiments have
ruled out childhood memory as an explanation for the ability to recognize kin
by scent, Mateo said at the Animal Behavior Society meeting held in Snowbird,
Utah, this week.
Knowing relatives by scent is a big deal for ground squirrels.
They live high in the Sierra Nevada and
Cascade ranges, with only some three months a year of above-ground time for
eating and raising families. Females cooperate with their close relatives in such
tasks as sounding alarms when danger looms.
When a ground squirrel digs its way up through the snow and
emerges from hibernation, it has forgotten the smells of former neighbors that
weren’t related. Mateo said. But the newly emerged ground squirrel does,
somehow, respond to its kin.
Mateo switched around newborn ground squirrels so they would
grow up in a family with a smell different from the armpit reference guides. In
the wild, the ground squirrels usually hibernate alone, so at hibernation time
she offered her test subjects individual tubs at a research center and burlap
to shred into a nest. When the youngsters emerged from their tubs the next spring,
Mateo studied their reactions to plastic cubes she had swiped across the cheeks
of various other ground squirrels.
In a series of scent tests, the squirrels didn’t seem to
remember their foster family smells, Mateo said. The ground squirrels reacted
the same way (measured in sniffing time) when offered side-by-side cubes with scents
of the foster family’s kin and scents of its non-kin.
Instead, the ground squirrels did distinguish between the
scents of biological family kin and the scents of non-kin. Mateo concluded that
any template developed in childhood had vanished and that the ground squirrels were
relying on their armpits.
Found in: Biology and Life
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