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Journal ArticleDOI

Discrimination by Female Mice between the Odours of Parasitized and Non-Parasitized Males

TLDR
It is suggested that the detection and avoidance of infected males by female mice through odour cues may function to reduce parasite transmission and potentially serve as a component of female mate selection or choice.
Abstract
The detection and avoidance of parasitized males has been proposed to be a component of female mate choice. We investigated whether or not female laboratory mice, Mus musculus domesticus, could discriminate between parasitized and non-parasitized males on the basis of odour. Female mice were given a choice between the urine and other odorous secretions of either a male mouse sub-clinically infected for five days with the naturally occurring, enteric, single host, protozoan parasite, Eimeria vermiformis, or an uninfected male. Females showed a marked preference for the odours of non-parasitized male mice over those of the parasitized males; as measured by number of investigations, time spent per investigation, and total investigation time of the odours in a choice situation. Female mice also displayed an overwhelming initial, or first choice, preference for the odours of the non-parasitized male mice over those of the parasitized males. These observations show that female mice can distinguish between the odours of parasitized and non-parasitized males, and discriminate against parasitized males on the basis of odour. We suggest that the detection and avoidance of infected males by female mice through odour cues may function to reduce parasite transmission and potentially serve as a component of female mate selection or choice.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of chemical communication in mate choice.

TL;DR: The evidence for pheromones as indicators of mate quality is reviewed and the extent of their use in individual mate assessment is examined, highlighting potential areas for future research and the need for interdisciplinary research that combines exploration of chemical, physiological and behavioural processes to further understand the role of chemical cues in mate assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Major Histocompatibility Complex, Sexual Selection, and Mate Choice

TL;DR: MHC ligand peptides may be the natural “perfume” that reveals a potential partner's MHC genetics probably in all vertebrates and maximizes resistance to ever-changing infectious diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical signals and parasite-mediated sexual selection.

TL;DR: Chemosensory signals also reveal a male's disease resistance and his genetic compatibility, and recent advances in chemical communication will help to determine what kind of information is revealed by an individual's scent.
Book ChapterDOI

Scent-marking by male mammals: Cheat-proof signals to competitors and mates

TL;DR: Scent-marking is a ubiquitous form of olfactory signaling in male mammals and both territorial males in resource-defense mating systems and dominant males in dominance mating systems scent-mark, and it is argued that the mechanisms are used conditionally, depending on information available and potential costs and benefits to receivers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathogen-avoidance mechanisms and the stigmatization of obese people

TL;DR: This paper found that people who are chronically concerned about pathogen transmission have more negative attitudes toward obese people; this effect was especially pronounced following visual exposure to obese individuals, and they found that obesity is implicitly associated with disease-connoting concepts.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Heritable true fitness and bright birds: a role for parasites?

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of seven surveys of blood parasites in North American passerines reveals weak, highly significant association over species between incidence of chronic blood infections (five genera of protozoa and one nematode) and striking display (three characters: male "brightness", female "brights", and male song).
Journal ArticleDOI

Female sticklebacks use male coloration in mate choice and hence avoid parasitized males

TL;DR: It is shown that in the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) the intensity of male red breeding coloration positively correlates with physical condition, and the females recognize the formerly parasitized males by the lower intensity of theirbreeding coloration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control of mating preferences in mice by genes in the major histocompatibility complex.

TL;DR: These findings conform to a provisional model in which olfactory mating preference is governed by two linked genes in the region of H-2, one for the female signal andOne for the male receptor, and this suggests memory, but fortuitous bias is not excluded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mating patterns in seminatural populations of mice influenced by MHC genotype.

TL;DR: Reproductive mechanisms, primarily mating preferences, result in 27% fewer MHC-homozygous offspring than expected from random mating, and mating preferences are strong enough to account for most of the MHC genetic diversity found in natural populations of Mus.
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