Sunday, May 11, 2008

You Can Not Make This Stuff Up 051108

Afraid of someone? Smell their pee. Really.

Hey folks,

I’m sorry, but, WHAT?

Live Science - Cat Urine Makes Mice Macho

Tom and Jerry may never get along, but cats could help mice get lucky in love.

Cat odor is known scare mice away, but it also seems to act like an aphrodisiac for the rodents, a new study shows.

How much did THIS cost?

The smell makes male mice more macho, helping lure in females, researchers said.

Just a whiff

Unsurprisingly, past studies had found that cat odor typically causes mice to panic or flee, although there are parasites that can hijack rodent brains and make them suicidally seek felines out.

And we need to know this WHY?

Scientists had expected that stressing out normal mice would put a dent in their love lives. Scared mice aren't sexy mice.

To see if a whiff of cat might serve as a mouse repellent to help keep rodent pests away, researchers exposed mice to cat pee for eight weeks.

Unexpectedly, two months of cat odor did not lead to cowering mice, as one might expect from constant threatening. Instead, researchers found it led to aggressive males. These were more than twice as likely fight with other mice than rodents exposed to rabbit urine for the same amount of time.

Rabbit urine? {Laughing}

And such combative males smelled delectable to females. When presented with male pee, females that were in heat spent more time sniffing urine from males exposed to cat odor for weeks than ones that had inhaled rabbit fumes.

There’s a whole lot of pee smelling going on here.

New thinking

Before, it was generally believed that the presence of predators always had a negative effect on their prey, “but our findings show that presence of low or moderate predation may be positive to prey,” said researcher Jian-Xu Zhang, a pheromone researcher at the Institute of Zoology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.

You KNEW I had to find a picture of this guy.

Female mice like aggressive males, and rodents constantly exposed to cat pee may seem like strong males that can survive the constant threat of predators, the researchers suggested.

These findings could help improve life for animals in captivity, Zhang said. Zoos could enrich the environments of animals with just a whiff of their predators to stimulate them.

{Laughing} At least there is a use for the findings. I guess.

Zhang and his colleagues detailed their findings in the May issue of the Journal of Ethology.

There you have it folks. If you are scared of someone, or some thing, smell their pee. Hey, it might even help you in bed.
Peter

Sources:
Live Science - Cat Urine Makes Mice Macho

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