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Saying Hello
Saying Hello

Odors Trigger Memory In Squirrels
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Feb. 3, 2006 — Humans who smell a pillow, shirt, shoe or other object that was in close contact with another person may be reminded of a certain someone. New research suggests squirrels have a similar ability to not only associate smells with particular squirrels, but to also create mental images of them.

The study, published in this month's Animal Behavior, represents the first time the ability has been demonstrated in rodents. A second, not-yet-published study by other researchers indicates hamsters also have the skill.

Like humans, squirrels must first be familiar with an individual before an odor can become associated with that other animal. A husband, for example, could smell his wife's perfume in an elevator and be reminded of her, but a perfume he has never smelled before could trigger no such memories.

"Squirrels need to be familiar with others to be able to put all of an individual's odors into a representation of that individual, as if repeated interactions make that individual meaningful, and thus worthy of remembering at this level," explained Jill Mateo, who conducted the research.
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Mateo, who is an assistant professor in the Department of Comparative Human Development at the University of Chicago, told Animal Planet News that squirrels not only scent mark where they have been, but they also release odors from the mouth, ears, back, the bottom of their feet, and from their anal scent glands.

She first presented Belding's ground squirrels, Spermophilus beldingi, with each of these odors from different squirrels. Over time, squirrels became familiar with an odor and stopped sniffing it. When presented with a new odor from a different squirrel, the squirrel's interest piqued again.

Mateo explained that this means squirrels "produce unique odors and other squirrels can detect this difference."

Surprisingly, urine was not found to not be individually distinct. In other words, all of the other odors appear to convey information about individuals, but urine does not appear to carry this level of data, possibly because it contains too much waste material.

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Picture(s): Courtesy of Jill Mateo |

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