Royal Society Open Science (Dec 2024)

Identification and field testing of sex-attractant semiochemicals produced by male deer mice, Peromyscus maniculatus

  • Elana Varner,
  • Regine Gries,
  • Stephen Takács,
  • Hanna Jackson,
  • Leah Purdey,
  • Daniella Gofredo,
  • Alishba Bibal,
  • Gerhard Gries

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.241257
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12

Abstract

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Following previous reports that male deer mice, Peromyscus maniculatus, produce chemical signals that attract conspecific females, we analysed and field-tested sex-attractant semiochemicals (message-bearing chemicals) of male deer mice. Field traps baited with urine- and faeces-soiled bedding of male mice captured adult female, but not male, mice, indicating dissemination of sex-attractant semiochemicals from the males’ excreta. Analysing excreta headspace volatiles of both males and females by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry revealed that 5-methyl-2-hexanone was male-specific, and that eight other ketones (3-methyl-2-pentanone, 2-hexanone, 4-heptanone, 2-heptanone, 6-methyl-2-heptanone, 3-octanone, 2-octanone, 2-nonanone) were 2.6–5.6 times more abundant in male, than in female, samples. In a field experiment with paired trap boxes, treatment boxes baited with the synthetic ketone lure captured 3.4 times more females (17 : 5) and 1.6 times fewer males (5 : 8) than corresponding unbaited boxes. In a follow-up paired-trap field experiment, treatment boxes baited with both the ketone lure and synthetic testosterone captured 8 times more mature females and 2.3 times more immature females, but 9 times fewer immature males, than control boxes baited only with the ketone lure, all indicating that testosterone is a synergistic sex-attractant semiochemical. As previously shown in house mice, Mus musculus, and brown rats, Rattus norvegicus, sex-attractant semiochemicals of male deer mice comprise both volatile and sex steroid components.

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