Pheromone cuts down a male's flirting time.A male salamander salamander, an amphibian of the order Urodela, or Caudata. Salamanders have tails and small, weak limbs; superficially they resemble the unrelated lizards (which are reptiles), but they are easily distinguished by their lack of scales and claws, and by their moist, doesn't exactly get his date tipsy to speed courtship to its standard conclusion. However, there's just something about the scent of his chin that does the same job, and now researchers say they know what that enticing something is. Earlier work suggested that a gland that appears under the chin of a male Jordan's salamander during breeding season produces a chemical message, or pheromone pheromone Any chemical compound secreted by an organism in minute amounts to elicit a particular reaction from other organisms of the same species. Pheromones are widespread among insects and vertebrates (except birds) and are present in some fungi, slime molds, and algae. , explains Stephanie M. Rollmann of the University of Chicago. Entomologists The following is a list of entomologists, people who have studied insects. Name Born Died Country Speciality John Abbot 1751 1840 United States have identified perhaps a thousand insect pheromones pheromones, any of a variety of substances, secreted by many animal species, that alter the behavior of individuals of the same species. Sex attractant pheromones, secreted by a male or female to attract the opposite sex, are widespread among insects. , but vertebrate chemistry has proved harder Counts differ, but the total of identified vertebrate pheromones is still struggling toward a dozen. Rollmann and her colleagues propose a protein from the salamander's chin gland as the latest addition to the list. In the Sept. 17 SCIENCE, they report tracking down the scent's active component and sequencing its gene. That sequence, they argue, resembles those for interleukin-6 cytokines Cytokines Chemicals made by the cells that act on other cells to stimulate or inhibit their function. Cytokines that stimulate growth are called "growth factors. , a diverse family of compounds regulating cell growth. "I was surprised," Rollmann says. This is the first hint of cytokines as pheromones. The effect of the chemical also is "quite novel," comments John G. Vandenbergh of North Carolina State University History
see odocoileushemionus columbiana. , and some antelopes--among other animals--use scents in courtship, usually as attractants, he says. However, he can't think of another vertebrate pheromone that influences the amount of flirting. To demonstrate the effect, Rollmann and her colleagues purified a proton from the chin gland. They then removed chin glands of 11 male salamanders. These males still courted normally, luring a female to perform an amphibian amphibian, in zoology amphibian, in zoology, cold-blooded vertebrate animal of the class Amphibia. There are three living orders of amphibians: the frogs and toads (order Anura, or Salientia), the salamanders and newts (order Urodela, or Caudata), and the waltz in which she straddles his tail and the pair waddles forward. During this duet, lasting up to about an hour, "he'll curl back and slap his gland across the openings to her nose," Rollmann says. The pheromone molecule is too heavy to waft through the air so these little love pats normally deliver the proton. When Rollmann dabbed females with the proton, nine pairs spent less time tail straddling than they did when Rollmann used a saline solution as a control. On average, she observed about a 15 percent reduction in flirting time. "I'd really like to know how it increases the mating success of a male in the wild," remarks Ring T. Carde of the University of California, Riverside The University of California, Riverside, commonly known as UCR or UC Riverside, is a public research university and one of ten campuses of the University of California system. . Carde, who studies moth pheromones, acknowledges that tracing pheromone effects in vertebrates is "much, much harder" than in insects. Bets Rasmussen of the Oregon Graduate Institute in Beaverton called the work "an exceptional study." The compound itself intrigues her, she says, because she sees growing evidence for proteins playing a role in vertebrate pheromone systems. Vertebrates send and recede pheromones via many routes. The pheromone that Rasmussen discovered, which also turns out to be a component of many moth pheromones, appears in a female elephant's urine. Male red-sided garter snakes pick up a sexual signal when they flick their tongues across a female's skin. The other known amphibian pheromone, from an aquatic-breeding salamander, disperses in water. Although it's too early to generalize much about vertebrate pheromones, the field "is in a very dynamic state right now," says Rasmussen. |
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