Pheromones
A pheromone is a chemical released by an animal that affects the behavior or physiology of animals of the same species. Pheromonal signals can have profound effects on animals that inhale them, but pheromones apparently are not consciously perceived in the same way as other odors. There are several different types of pheromones, which are released in urine or as glandular secretions. Certain pheromones are attractants to potential mates, others are repellants to potential competitors of the same sex, and still others play roles in mother-infant attachment. Some pheromones can also influence the timing of puberty, modify reproductive cycles, and even prevent embryonic implantation. While the roles of pheromones in many nonhuman species are important, pheromones have become less important in human behavior over evolutionary time compared to their importance to organisms with more limited behavioral repertoires.
The vomeronasal organ (VNO, or Jacobson’s organ) is a tubular, fluid-filled, olfactory organ present in many vertebrate animals that sits adjacent to the nasal cavity. It is very sensitive to pheromones and is connected to the nasal cavity by a duct. When molecules dissolve in the mucosa of the nasal cavity, they then enter the VNO where the pheromone molecules among them bind with specialized pheromone receptors. Upon exposure to pheromones from their own species or others, many animals, including cats, may display the flehmen response (shown in Figure 27.9), a curling of the upper lip that helps pheromone molecules enter the VNO.
Pheromonal signals are sent, not to the main olfactory bulb, but to a different neural structure that projects directly to the amygdala; recall that the amygdala is a brain center important in emotional reactions, such as fear. The pheromonal signal then continues to areas of the hypothalamus that are key to reproductive physiology and behavior. While some scientists assert that the VNO is apparently functionally vestigial in humans, even though there is a similar structure located near human nasal cavities, others are researching it as a possible functional system that may, for example, contribute to synchronization of menstrual cycles in women living in close proximity.
Describe how a male snake can physiologically detect the presence of a female that is trying to attract a mate.
- The pheromones secreted by a female dissolve and enter the vomeronasal organ. The dissolved molecules bind to receptors, which send a signal to the hypothalamus, which in turn sends the signal to the amygdala.
- The pheromones secreted by a female dissolve and enter the vomeronasal organ. The dissolved molecules bind to receptors, which send a signal to the amygdala, which in turn sends the signal to the hypothalamus.
- The pheromones secreted by a female dissolve and enter the amygdala. The dissolved molecules bind to receptors, which send a signal to the vomeronasal organ, which in turn sends the signal to the hypothalamus.
- The pheromones secreted by a female dissolve and enter the amygdala. The dissolved molecules bind to receptors, which send a signal to the hypothalamus, which in turn sends the signal to the vomeronasal organ.