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This paper describes the feeding behaviour ofRousettus leschenaulti Desmarest, 1820 on lychees, the preferred cultivated food of this bat in captive conditions. We found that feeding comprised 25–30% of the total activity of these animals in a flight cage and that feeding durations were not significantly different between two sexes. To evaluate the role of odor and vision in foraging behaviour, we provided animals with artificial lychees, real lychees and artificial lychees soaked in the juice of real lychees and we recorded the number of feeding approaches to the different “fruit” types. The results indicated that bats approached real fruit significantly more than artificial fruit, and that the number of approaches to the soaked artificial fruit was also significantly higher than to the unsoaked artificial fruit. There were no significant differences between sexes in approach rates to any “fruit” type. We discuss the role of different sensory cues in the foraging behaviour of these bats and emphasize that the olfactory cue is important in detecting food resources and discriminating between different kinds of food items.
Reproduction is one of the basic biological functions in animals and humans. Due to the high biological relevance of reproduction and energy investment in their rearing offspring need to be of the best genetic quality and fitness to ensure preservation of the species. Both males and females employ mating strategies that would promote reproduction success and survival of their offspring. Choosing a high-quality mating partner is considered to be the main strategy in the reproduction process. One of the factors influencing the partner’s attractiveness is Major Histocompatibility Complex class I (MHC I). The influence of MHC I on mate choice is well established in animals, whereas it is still questioned in humans, where the social status of a partner may strongly influence the mate choice. In this review the role of the MHC I on mate choice in animals and humans is discussed. The studies published so far show that all investigated mammalian species can detect fractions of the MHC I molecules in urine and other body fluids. The response to the signal carried by MHC I is context-dependent and varies not only between species, but also between genders and may be modulated by various socioecological factors in every phase of the reproduction process, until zygote formation. These results suggest that MHC plays an important role in the choice of a reproductive partner in all mammal species, including humans.
The ability of the tuco-tuco Ctenomys talarum Thomas, 1898 to recognize sex by olfactory cues contained in urine, faeces and soiled shavings was tested by using preference tests. Nonbreeding tuco-tucos selected odours from opposite-sex rather than same-sex conspecifics. This pattern differed between sexes: females spent more time sniffing male than female odours for all scent sources whereas males did not show any difference in the time they spent investigating odours of each sex for each tested odour sources. Dissimilarities in odour selections between sexes may be attributed to a different combination of factors involved in olfactory interest for each sex. The function of gender cues recognition is discussed.
We investigated the reaction of bank voles Clethrionomys glareolus (Schreber, 1780) to odors of conspecific individuals and that of wood mice Apodemus sylvaticus (Linnaeus, 1758) in a mature forest in central Poland (52°20'N, 27°25'E). Our results show no difference in catching bank voles in traps using conspecific or wood mouse odors as bait.
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