Fox urine scent data
收藏DataCite Commons2021-03-12 更新2025-04-17 收录
下载链接:
https://data.utas.edu.au/metadata/31c142d4-d8a3-4e4b-82e3-847b6047bf82
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
The red fox is a highly adaptable mammal that has established itself world-wide in many different environments. Contributing to its success is a social structure based on chemical signalling between individuals. Urine scent marking behaviour has long been known in foxes, but there has not been a recent study of the chemical composition of fox urine. We have used solid-phase microextraction and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to analyze the urinary volatiles in 15 free-ranging wild foxes (2 female) living in farmlands and bush in Victoria, Australia. Foxes here are routinely culled as feral pests, and the urine was collected by bladder puncture soon after death. Compounds were identified from their mass spectra and Kovats retention indices. There were 53 possible endogenous scent compounds, 10 plant-derived compounds and 5 anthropogenic xenobiotics. Among the plant chemicals were several aromatic apocarotenoids previously found in greater abundance in the fox tail gland. They reflect the dietary consumption of carotenoids, essential for optimal health. One third of all the endogenous volatiles were sulfur compounds, a highly odiferous group which included thiols, methylsulfides and polysulfides. Five of the sulfur compounds (3-isopentenyl thiol, 1- and 2-phenylethyl methyl sulfide, octanethiol and benzyl methyl sulfide) have only been found in foxes, and four others (isopentyl methyl sulfide, 3-isopentenyl methyl sulfide, and 1- and 2-phenylethane thiol) only in some canid, mink and skunk species.
The urinary scent chemistry may represent a highly evolved system of semiochemicals for communication between foxes. The data files attached to this record support the paper "Volatile Scent Chemicals in the Urine of the Red Fox, 𝘝𝘶𝘭𝘱𝘦𝘴 𝘷𝘶𝘭𝘱𝘦𝘴".
提供机构:
University of Tasmania
创建时间:
2021-03-12



