Isolation, Identification and Function of the Chief Component of the Male Tarsal Scent in Black-tailed Deer

THE tarsal organ of deer of the genus Odocoileus is located, medially on the ankle (Fig. 1) and consists of sebaceous and apocrine sudoriferous glands as well as greatly enlarged arrector pili smooth muscle bundles 1 , which effect the erection of a long tuft of bright, stiff hairs. The hairs in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 1969-01, Vol.221 (5177), p.284-285
Hauptverfasser: BROWNLEE, ROBERT G., SILVERSTEIN, ROBERT M., MÜLLER-SCHWARZE, DIETLAND, SINGER, ALAN G.
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container_end_page 285
container_issue 5177
container_start_page 284
container_title Nature (London)
container_volume 221
creator BROWNLEE, ROBERT G.
SILVERSTEIN, ROBERT M.
MÜLLER-SCHWARZE, DIETLAND
SINGER, ALAN G.
description THE tarsal organ of deer of the genus Odocoileus is located, medially on the ankle (Fig. 1) and consists of sebaceous and apocrine sudoriferous glands as well as greatly enlarged arrector pili smooth muscle bundles 1 , which effect the erection of a long tuft of bright, stiff hairs. The hairs in the centre of the tuft are covered with a lipid film carrying the scent. The glands and urine are the possible sources of the tarsal scent. Tarsal organs are found only in tele-metacarpal deer (Odocoileinae); that is, in the New World genera Odocoileus, Blastocerus and Mazama , and in the Holarctic genera Alces and Rangifer 2 .
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The hairs in the centre of the tuft are covered with a lipid film carrying the scent. The glands and urine are the possible sources of the tarsal scent. 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Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
title Isolation, Identification and Function of the Chief Component of the Male Tarsal Scent in Black-tailed Deer
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