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{{short description|Secreted or excreted chemical factor that triggers a social response in members of the same species}}
[[Image:Nasinov_9024.JPG|right|thumb|Fanning [[honeybee]] exposes [[Nasonov]] gland (white-at tip of abdomen) releasing pheromone to entice swarm into an empty hive]]
{{other uses}}
A '''pheromone''' is a chemical that triggers an innate behavioural response in another member of the same species. There are ''alarm pheromones'', ''food trail pheromones'', ''sex pheromones'', and many others that affect behavior or physiology. Their use among [[insect]]s has been particularly well documented, although many [[vertebrate]]s and [[plant]]s also communicate using pheromones.
[[File:Nasinov 9024.JPG|right|thumb|A fanning [[honeybee]] exposes [[Nasonov's gland]] (white – at tip of abdomen) releasing pheromone to entice swarm into an empty hive]]


A '''pheromone''' ({{etymology|grc|''{{wikt-lang|grc|φέρω}}'' ({{grc-transl|φέρω}})|to bear||[[hormone]]}}) is a secreted or excreted [[chemical]] factor that triggers a social response in members of the same [[species]]. Pheromones are chemicals capable of acting like hormones outside the body of the secreting individual, to affect the behavior of the receiving individuals.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=12896|title=Definition of pheromone|newspaper=Medicinenet|date=19 March 2012|publisher=MedicineNet Inc.|access-date=14 February 2010|archive-date=11 May 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110511134143/http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=12896|url-status=dead}}</ref> There are ''[[alarm signal|alarm]] pheromones'', ''food [[trail pheromone]]s'', ''[[sex pheromones]]'', and many others that affect behavior or physiology. Pheromones are used by many organisms, from basic [[unicellular]] [[prokaryote]]s to complex [[multicellular]] [[eukaryote]]s.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kleerebezem M, Quadri LE | title = Peptide pheromone-dependent regulation of antimicrobial peptide production in Gram-positive bacteria: a case of multicellular behavior | journal = Peptides | volume = 22 | issue = 10 | pages = 1579–1596 | date = October 2001 | pmid = 11587786 | doi = 10.1016/S0196-9781(01)00493-4 | s2cid = 38943224 }}</ref> Their use among [[insect]]s has been particularly well documented. In addition, some [[vertebrate]]s, [[plant]]s and [[ciliates]] communicate by using pheromones. The ecological functions and evolution of pheromones are a major topic of research in the field of [[chemical ecology]].<ref>{{cite journal |journal=Journal of Chemical Education |volume=60 |issue=7 |year=1983 |title=Chemical Ecology: Chemical Communication in Nature |author1=Wood William F. |doi=10.1021/ed060p531|pages=1531–539 |bibcode=1983JChEd..60..531W }}</ref>
== Explanation ==
Insect pheromones of pest species, such as the [[Japanese beetle]] and the [[gypsy moth]], can be used to trap them for monitoring purposes or for control by creating confusion, disrupting mating and preventing them from laying eggs.


==Background==
In [[mammal]]s and [[reptile]]s, pheromones may be detected by the [[vomeronasal organ]], or Jacobson's organ, which lies between the nose and mouth, although some are detected by regular [[olfactory]] membranes.
The [[portmanteau word]] "pheromone" was coined by [[Peter Karlson]] and [[Martin Lüscher]] in 1959, based on the Greek φέρω ''phérō'' ('I carry') and ὁρμων ''hórmōn'' ('stimulating').<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Karlson P, Luscher M | title = Pheromones': a new term for a class of biologically active substances | journal = Nature | volume = 183 | issue = 4653 | pages = 55–56 | date = January 1959 | pmid = 13622694 | doi = 10.1038/183055a0 | s2cid = 4243699 | bibcode = 1959Natur.183...55K }}</ref> Pheromones are also sometimes classified as ecto-hormones. They were researched earlier by various scientists, including [[Jean-Henri Fabre]], [[Joseph Albert Lintner|Joseph A. Lintner]], [[Adolf Butenandt]], and [[ethology|ethologist]] [[Karl von Frisch]] who called them various names, like for instance "alarm substances". These chemical messengers are transported outside of the body and affect [[nervous system|neurocircuits]], including the [[autonomous nervous system]] with [[hormone]] or [[cytokine]] mediated [[physiology|physiological]] changes, [[inflammation|inflammatory]] signaling, [[immune system]] changes and/or behavioral change in the recipient.<ref name=Kohl01>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kohl JV, Atzmueller M, Fink B, Grammer K | title = Human pheromones: integrating neuroendocrinology and ethology | journal = Neuro Endocrinology Letters | volume = 22 | issue = 5 | pages = 309–321 | date = October 2001 | pmid = 11600881 }}</ref> They proposed the term to describe chemical signals from [[conspecific]]s that elicit innate behaviors soon after the German biochemist Adolf Butenandt had characterized the first such chemical, [[bombykol]], a chemically well-characterized pheromone released by the female [[silkworm]] to attract mates.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Butenandt A, Beckmann R, Hecker E | title = [On the sexattractant of silk-moths. I. The biological test and the isolation of the pure sex-attractant bombykol] | journal = Hoppe-Seyler's Zeitschrift für Physiologische Chemie | volume = 324 | pages = 71–83 | date = May 1961 | pmid = 13689417 | doi = 10.1515/bchm2.1961.324.1.71 | author-link = Adolf Butenandt }}</ref>


==Categorization by function==
==Origin of the term==
The term "pheromone" was introduced by Peter Karlson and [[Adolf Butenandt]] in 1959, based on the Greek ''pherein '' (to transport) and ''hormon'' (to stimulate). They proposed the term to describe chemical signals from [[conspecific]]s which elicit innate behaviours soon after Butenandt characterized the first such chemical, [[Bombykol]] (a chemically well-characterized pheromone released by the female [[silkworm]] to attract mates).<ref>Karlson, P., Lüscher, M. (1959). Pheromones: a new term for a class of biologically active substances. ''[[Nature]]'' '''183''', 55-56.</ref> <!-- I'll get a direct quote tomorrow when i can access the paper! -->


===Aggregation===
==Types of pheromones==
[[Image:Bug aggregation.jpg|right|thumb|Aggregation of bug nymphs]]
===Aggregation pheromones===
[[File:Podura aquatica Podkomorské lesy.jpg|thumb|Aggregation of the water [[springtail]] ''[[Podura aquatica]]'']]
Produced by one or the other sex, these pheromones attract individuals of both sexes.
Aggregation pheromones function in [[mate choice]], overcoming host resistance by mass attack, and defense against predators. A group of individuals at one location is referred to as an aggregation, whether consisting of one sex or both sexes. Male-produced sex attractants have been called aggregation pheromones, because they usually result in the arrival of both sexes at a calling site and increase the density of conspecifics surrounding the pheromone source. Most sex pheromones are produced by the females; only a small percentage of sex attractants are produced by males.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.msu.edu/user/miller20/carmona.htm|title=Insect aggregation pheromones|website=www.msu.edu|access-date=19 February 2018}}</ref> Aggregation pheromones have been found in members of the [[Coleoptera]], [[Springtail|Collembola]],<ref>{{Cite journal | vauthors = Salmon S, Rebuffat S, Prado S, Sablier M, d'Haese C, Sun JS, Ponge JF |date=2019-05-20 |title=Chemical communication in springtails: a review of facts and perspectives |journal=Biology and Fertility of Soils |volume=55 |issue=5 |pages=425–438 |doi=10.1007/s00374-019-01365-8 |bibcode=2019BioFS..55..425S |s2cid=159042283 |issn=0178-2762|url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02152310/file/Chemical%20communication%20in%20springtails%20final%20version.pdf }}</ref> [[Diptera]], [[Hemiptera]], [[Dictyoptera]], and [[Orthoptera]]. In recent decades, aggregation pheromones have proven useful in the management of many pests, such as the boll weevil (''[[Anthonomus grandis]]''), the pea and bean weevil (''[[Sitona lineatus]]'', and stored product weevils (e.g. ''[[Sitophilus zeamais]]'', ''[[Sitophilus granarius]]'', and ''[[Sitophilus oryzae]]''). Aggregation pheromones are among the most ecologically selective pest suppression methods. They are non-toxic and effective at very low concentrations.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Landolt JP |title=Sex attractant and aggregation pheromones of male phytophagous insects |journal=American Entomologist |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=12–22 |year=1997 |doi= 10.1093/ae/43.1.12|doi-access=free }}</ref>


===Alarm pheromones===
===Alarm===
{{Main|Alarm signal}}
Some species release a volatile substance when attacked by a predator that can trigger flight (in [[aphid]]s) or aggression (in bees) in members of the same species. Pheromones also exist in plants:certain plants emit alarm pheromones when grazed upon, resulting in [[tannin]] production in neighboring plants. These tannins make the plants less appetizing for the [[herbivore]].
Some species release a volatile substance when attacked by a predator that can trigger flight (in [[aphid]]s) or aggression (in [[ant]]s, [[bee]]s, [[termite]]s, and [[wasp]]s)<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Sobotník J, Hanus R, Kalinová B, Piskorski R, Cvacka J, Bourguignon T, Roisin Y | title = (E,E)-alpha-farnesene, an alarm pheromone of the termite Prorhinotermes canalifrons | journal = Journal of Chemical Ecology | volume = 34 | issue = 4 | pages = 478–486 | date = April 2008 | pmid = 18386097 | doi = 10.1007/s10886-008-9450-2 | bibcode = 2008JCEco..34..478S | s2cid = 8755176 | citeseerx = 10.1.1.673.1337 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Wood | first1 = William F. | last2 = Chong | first2 = Berni | year = 1975 | title = 3-Octanone and 3-Octanol; Alarm Pheromones from East African Acacia Ants | journal = Journal of the Georgia Entomological Society | volume = 10 | pages = 332–334}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Wood | first1 = William F. | last2 = Palmer | first2 = Todd M. | last3 = Stanton | first3 = Maureen L. | year = 2002 | title = A comparison of volatiles in mandibular glands from three Crematogaster ant symbionts of the whistling thorn acacia | journal = J Biochemical Systematics and Ecology | volume = 30 | issue = 3 | pages = 217–222 | doi=10.1016/S0305-1978(01)00099-0| bibcode = 2002BioSE..30..217W }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Wood | first1 = William F. | last2 = Hoang | first2 = Thuy-Tien | last3 = McGlynn | first3 = Terrence P. | year = 2011 | title = Volatile components from the mandibular glands of the turtle ants, Cephalotes alfaroi and C. cristatus | journal = Biochemical Systematics and Ecology | volume = 39 | pages = 135–138 | doi=10.1016/j.bse.2011.01.013 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Wood | first1 = William F. | year = 2005 | title = Comparison of mandibular gland volatiles from ants of the bull horn acacia, Acacia collinsii | journal = Biochemical Systematics and Ecology | volume = 33 | issue = 7 | pages = 651–658 | doi=10.1016/j.bse.2004.12.009| bibcode = 2005BioSE..33..651W }}</ref> in members of the same species. For example, ''[[Vespula squamosa]]'' use alarm pheromones to alert others to a threat.<ref>Landoldt, P. J., Reed, H. C., and Heath, R. R. "An Alarm Pheromone from Heads of Worker Vespula squamosa (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)", "Florida Entomologist", June 1999.</ref> In ''[[Polistes exclamans]]'', alarm pheromones are also used as an alert to incoming predators.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Post DC, Downing HA, Jeanne RL | title = Alarm response to venom by social waspsPolistes exclamans andP. fuscatus (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) | journal = Journal of Chemical Ecology | volume = 10 | issue = 10 | pages = 1425–1433 | date = October 1984 | pmid = 24318343 | doi = 10.1007/BF00990313 | bibcode = 1984JCEco..10.1425P | s2cid = 38398672 }}</ref> Pheromones also exist in plants: Certain plants emit alarm pheromones when grazed upon, resulting in [[tannin]] production in neighboring plants.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book| vauthors = Marcus JB |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1097958893|title=Aging, nutrition and taste nutrition, food science and culinary perspectives for aging tastefully|date=2019|publisher=Elsevier Academic Press |isbn=978-0-12-813528-0|location=[Place of publication not identified]|oclc=1097958893}}</ref> These tannins make the plants less appetizing to [[herbivore]]s.<ref name=":1" />


An alarm pheromone has been documented in a mammalian species. Alarmed [[pronghorn]], ''Antilocapra americana'' flair their white rump hair and exposes two highly odoriferous glands that releases a compound described having the odor "reminiscent of buttered popcorn". This sends a message to other pronghorns by both sight and smell about a present danger. This scent has been observed by humans 20 to 30 meters downwind from alarmed animals. The major odour compound identified from this gland is [[2-pyrrolidinone]].<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Wood | first1 = William F. | year = 2002 | title = 2-Pyrrolidinone, a putative alerting pheromone from rump glands of pronghorn, Antilocapra Americana | journal = Biochemical Systematics and Ecology | volume = 30 | issue = 4 | pages = 361–363 | doi=10.1016/S0305-1978(01)00097-7| bibcode = 2002BioSE..30..361W }}</ref>
===Epideictic pheromones===
Recognized in insects, these pheromones are different than territory pheromones. According to [[Jean Henri Fabre|Fabre]] (translated from French), "Females who lay their eggs in these fruits deposit these mysterious substances in the vicinity of their clutch to signal to other females of the same species so that they will clutch elsewhere."
[[Image:Bug aggregation.jpg|right|thumb|Aggregation of nymphs of bugs]]


===Releaser pheromones===
===Epideictic===
Epideictic pheromones are different from territory pheromones, when it comes to insects. [[Jean Henri Fabre|Fabre]] observed and noted how "females who lay their eggs in these fruits deposit these mysterious substances in the vicinity of their clutch to signal to other females of the same species they should clutch elsewhere." It may be helpful to note that the word [[epideictic]], having to do with display or show (from the Greek 'deixis'), has a different but related meaning in rhetoric, the human art of persuasion by means of words.
Powerful attractant molecules that some organisms may use to attract mates from a distance of 2 miles or more. This type of pheromone generally elicites rapid response but is quickly degraded. In contrast, a primer pheromone would have a slower onset but a longer duration.


===Primer pheromones===
===Territorial===
[[File:Urinating dog (7768361246).jpg|thumb|[[Dog communication|Dogs communicate]] using pheromones and [[olfactic communication|olfactory signals]] in [[urine]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Miklósi |first=Ádám |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_6BIDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA110 |title=The Dog: A Natural History |date=2018-04-03 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-1-4008-8999-0 |language=en}}</ref>]]
These pheromones trigger a change of developmental events.
Laid down in the environment, territorial pheromones mark the boundaries and identity of an organism's territory. Cats and dogs deposit these pheromones by [[spraying (animal behavior)|urinating on landmarks]] that mark the perimeter of the claimed territory. In social seabirds, the preen gland is used to mark nests, nuptial gifts, and territory boundaries with behavior formerly described as '[[displacement activity]]'.<ref name="users.rcn.com"/>


===Territorial pheromones===
===Trail===
{{Main|Trail pheromone}}
Laid down in the environment, these pheromones mark the boundaries of an organism's territory. In dogs, these hormones are present in the urine, which they deposit on landmarks serving to mark the perimeter of the claimed territory.
Social insects commonly use trail pheromones. For example, [[ant]]s mark their paths with pheromones consisting of volatile [[hydrocarbon]]s. Certain ants lay down an initial trail of pheromones as they return to the nest with food. This trail attracts other ants and serves as a guide.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Feb98/antpheromone.hrs.html | title= Excited ants follow pheromone trail of same chemical they will use to paralyze their prey | access-date= 2006-03-14}}</ref> As long as the food source remains available, visiting ants will continuously renew the pheromone trail. The pheromone requires continuous renewal because it evaporates quickly. When the food supply begins to dwindle, the trail-making ceases. Pharaoh ants (''[[Monomorium pharaonis]]'') mark trails that no longer lead to food with a repellent pheromone, which causes avoidance behaviour in ants.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Robinson EJ, Green KE, Jenner EA, Holcombe M, Ratnieks FL | title = Decay rates of attractive and repellent pheromones in an ant foraging trail network. | journal = Insectes Sociaux | date = 2008 | volume = 55 | issue = 3 | pages = 246–251 | doi = 10.1007/s00040-008-0994-5 | s2cid = 27760894 | url = http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/46214/1/RobinsonPheromoneDecayInsSoc.pdf }}</ref>
Repellent trail markers may help ants to undertake more efficient collective exploration.<ref>
{{cite journal | vauthors = Hunt ER, Franks NR, Baddeley RJ | title = The Bayesian superorganism: externalized memories facilitate distributed sampling | journal = Journal of the Royal Society, Interface | volume = 17 | issue = 167 | pages = 20190848 | date = June 2020 | pmid = 32546115 | pmc = 7328406 | doi = 10.1098/rsif.2019.0848 | doi-access = free }}</ref>
The army ant ''[[Eciton burchellii]]'' provides an example of using pheromones to mark and maintain foraging paths. When species of wasps such as ''[[Polybia sericea]]'' found new nests, they use pheromones to lead the rest of the colony to the new nesting site.


Gregarious caterpillars, such as the [[Forest tent caterpillar moth|forest tent caterpillar]], lay down pheromone trails that are used to achieve group movement.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Fitzgerald TD | title = Use of pheromone mimic to cause the disintegration and collapse of colonies of tent caterpillars ( Malacosoma spp.). | journal = Journal of Applied Entomology | date = July 2008 | volume = 132 | issue = 6 | pages = 451–460 | doi = 10.1111/j.1439-0418.2008.01286.x | s2cid = 83824574 }}
===Trail pheromones===
</ref>
These pheromones are common in social insects. For example, [[ant]]s mark their paths with these pheromones, which are non-volatile [[hydrocarbon]]s.


===Sex===
Certain ants lay down an initial trail of pheromones as they return to the nest with food. This trail attracts other ants and serves as a guide.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Feb98/antpheromone.hrs.html | title=Excited ants follow pheromone trail of same chemical they will use to paralyze their prey | accessdate=2006-03-14}}</ref> As long as the food source remains, the pheromone trail will be continually renewed. The pheromone must be continually renewed because it evaporates quickly. When the supply begins to dwindle, the trailmaking ceases. In at least one species of ant, trails that no longer lead to food are also marked with a repellent pheromone <ref>{{cite web | url=http://animal.discovery.com/news/afp/20051128/ants.html | title=Study: Ants Use Scents Like Road Signs | accessdate=2006-03-14}}</ref>.
{{main|Sex pheromone}}
[[File:Danaus chrysippus male by kadavoor.JPG|right|thumb|Male ''Danaus chrysippus'' showing the pheromone pouch and brush-like organ in [[Kerala, India]]]]
In animals, sex pheromones indicate the availability of the female for breeding. Male animals may also emit pheromones that convey information about their species and [[genotype]].


At the microscopic level, a number of bacterial species (e.g. ''[[Bacillus subtilis]]'', ''[[Streptococcus pneumoniae]]'', ''[[Bacillus cereus]]'') release specific chemicals into the surrounding media to induce the "competent" state in neighboring bacteria.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Bernstein C, Bernstein H | title = Sexual communication | journal = Journal of Theoretical Biology | volume = 188 | issue = 1 | pages = 69–78 | date = September 1997 | pmid = 9299310 | doi = 10.1006/jtbi.1997.0459 | bibcode = 1997JThBi.188...69B }}</ref> [[Natural competence|Competence]] is a physiological state that allows bacterial cells to take up DNA from other cells and incorporate this DNA into their own genome, a sexual process called transformation.
===Sex pheromones===
[[Image:Sesiidae_Pheromon_fg01.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Sesiidae on a pheromone trap]]
In animals, sex pheromones indicate the availability of the female for breeding. Many insect species release sex pheromones to attract a mate and many [[Lepidoptera|lepidopterans]] can detect a potential mate from as far away as 10 km (6.2 miles). Pheromones can be used in [[gamete]]s to trail the opposite sex's gametes for [[fertilization]]. Pheromones are also used in the detection of [[oestrus]] in [[Pig|sows]]. [[Boar]] pheromones are sprayed into the [[wiktionary:sty|sty]], and those sows which exhibit [[sexual arousal]] are known to be currently available for breeding.


Among eukaryotic microorganisms, pheromones promote sexual interaction in numerous species.<ref>Danton H. O’Day, Paul A. Horgen (1981) Sexual Interactions in Eukaryotic Microbes Academic Press, New York. {{ISBN|0125241607}} {{ISBN|978-0125241601}}</ref> These species include the yeast ''[[Saccharomyces cerevisiae]]'', the filamentous fungi ''[[Neurospora crassa]]'' and [[Mucor mucedo]], the water mold ''[[Achlya ambisexualis]]'', the aquatic fungus ''[[Allomyces macrogynus]]'', the slime mold ''[[Dictyostelium discoideum]]'', the ciliate protozoan ''[[Blepharisma japonicum]]'' and the multicellular green algae ''[[Volvox carteri]]''. In addition, male [[copepod]]s can follow a [[three-dimensional]] pheromone trail left by a swimming female, and male [[gamete]]s of many animals use a pheromone to help find a female gamete for [[fertilization]].<ref>Dusenbery, David B. (2009). ''Living at Micro Scale'', Chapters 19 & 20. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts {{ISBN|978-0-674-03116-6}}.</ref>
Male animals also emit pheromones that convey information about what species they are, and their [[genotype]]. The purpose of pheromones giving information about genotype is a mechanism to avoid inbreeding. Females are attracted to males with the least similar genotype, which means they are attracted to males who are the least likely to be related to them. An exception to this is when the female is pregnant. Then they are most drawn to individuals with the most similar pheromones (and therefore genotype) because they want to keep family close by to aid with the raising of their young and to take advantage of protection.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}


Many well-studied insect species, such as the ant ''[[Leptothorax acervorum]]'', the moths ''[[Helicoverpa zea]]'' and ''[[Agrotis ipsilon]]'', the bee ''[[Xylocopa sonorina]],'' the frog [[Bibron's toadlet|Pseudophryne bibronii]], and the butterfly [[Edith's checkerspot]] release sex pheromones to attract a mate, and some [[lepidoptera]]ns (moths and butterflies) can detect a potential mate from as far away as {{convert|10|km|mi|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Raina AK, Klun JA | title = Brain factor control of sex pheromone production in the female corn earworm moth | journal = Science | volume = 225 | issue = 4661 | pages = 531–533 | date = August 1984 | pmid = 17750856 | doi = 10.1126/science.225.4661.531 | s2cid = 40949867 | bibcode = 1984Sci...225..531R }}</ref><ref name="XiangYang2009">{{cite journal | vauthors = Xiang Y, Yang M, Li Z |title=Calling behavior and rhythms of sex pheromone production in the Black Cutworm Moth in China|journal=Journal of Insect Behavior |volume=23 |issue=1 |year=2009 |pages=35–44 |doi=10.1007/s10905-009-9193-0|s2cid=45577568 }}</ref> Some insects, such as [[ghost moth]]s, use pheromones during [[lek mating]].<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Schulz S, Francke W, König WA, Schurig V, Mori K, Kittmann R, Schneider D | title = Male pheromone of swift moth, Hepialus hecta L. (Lepidoptera: Hepialidae) | journal = Journal of Chemical Ecology | volume = 16 | issue = 12 | pages = 3511–3521 | date = December 1990 | pmid = 24263445 | doi = 10.1007/BF00982114 | bibcode = 1990JCEco..16.3511S | s2cid = 26903035 }}</ref> Traps containing pheromones are used by farmers to detect and monitor insect populations in orchards. In addition, ''[[Colias eurytheme]] ''butterflies release pheromones, an olfactory cue important for mate selection.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Papke RS, Kemp DJ, Rutowski RL | year = 2007 | title = Multimodal Signalling: Structural Ultraviolet Reflectance Predicts Male Mating Success Better than Pheromones in the Butterfly Colias eurytheme L. (Pieridae) | journal = Animal Behaviour | volume = 73 | pages = 47–54 | doi=10.1016/j.anbehav.2006.07.004| s2cid = 40403665 }}</ref> In mealworm beetles, ''[[Mealworm|Tenebrio molitor]],'' the female preference of pheromones is dependent on the nutritional condition of the males.
===Other pheromones (not yet classified)===

This classification, based on the effects on behavior, remains artificial. Pheromones fill many additional functions.
The effect of Hz-2V virus infection on the reproductive physiology and behavior of female ''[[Helicoverpa zea]]'' moths is that in the absence of males they exhibited calling behavior and called as often but for shorter periods on average than control females. Even after these contacts virus-infected females made many frequent contacts with males and continued to call; they were found to produce five to seven times more pheromone and attracted twice as many males as did control females in flight tunnel experiments.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Burand JP, Tan W, Kim W, Nojima S, Roelofs W | title = Infection with the insect virus Hz-2v alters mating behavior and pheromone production in female Helicoverpa zea moths | journal = Journal of Insect Science | volume = 5 | pages = 6 | year = 2005 | pmid = 16299596 | pmc = 1283887 | doi = 10.1093/jis/5.1.6 }}</ref>
* [[Nasonov]] pheromones (worker bees)

Pheromones are also utilized by bee and wasp species. Some pheromones can be used to suppress the sexual behavior of other individuals allowing for a reproductive monopoly – the wasp ''[[Ropalidia marginata|R. marginata]] ''uses this.<ref>{{Cite journal|title = Natural history and behaviour of the primitively eusocial wasp (Hymenoptera: Vespidae): a comparison of the two sexes| vauthors = Sen R, Gadagkar R |date = 2010|journal = Journal of Natural History|volume = 44|issue = 15–16|pages = 959–968|doi = 10.1080/00222931003615703|s2cid = 84698285}}</ref> With regard to the ''[[Bombus hyperboreus]]'' species, males, otherwise known as drones, patrol circuits of scent marks (pheromones) to find queens.<ref>"Alpinobombus". ''Natural History Museum''. Retrieved 26 September 2015</ref> In particular, pheromones for the ''Bombus hyperboreus,'' include [[Oleyl alcohol|octadecenol]], 2,3-dihydro-6-transfarnesol, citronellol, and geranylcitronellol.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Svensson BG, Bergstrom G | year = 1979 | title = Marking Pheromones of Alpinobornbus Males | doi = 10.1007/bf00987845 | journal = Journal of Chemical Ecology | volume = 5 | issue = 4 | pages=603–615| bibcode = 1979JCEco...5..603S | s2cid = 20759942 }}</ref>

[[Sea urchin]]s release pheromones into the surrounding water, sending a chemical message that triggers other urchins in the colony to eject their sex cells simultaneously.

In plants, some homosporous ferns release a chemical called [[antheridiogen]], which affects sex expression. This is very similar to pheromones.

===Other===
This classification, based on the effects on behavior, remains artificial. Pheromones fill many additional functions.
* [[Nasonov pheromone]]s (worker bees)
* Royal pheromones (bees)
* Royal pheromones (bees)
* Calming (appeasement) pheromones (mammals)
* Calming (appeasement) pheromones (mammals)
* Necromones, given off by a deceased and decomposing organism; consisting of [[oleic acid|oleic]] and [[linoleic acid]]s, they allow crustaceans and hexapods to identify the presence of dead [[Conspecificity|conspecifics]].<ref>{{Cite journal | vauthors = Yao M, Rosenfeld J, Attridge S, Sidhu S, Aksenov V, Rollo CD | title = The Ancient Chemistry of Avoiding Risks of Predation and Disease | journal = Evolutionary Biology | volume = 36 | issue = 3 | pages = 267–281 | issn = 0071-3260 | doi = 10.1007/s11692-009-9069-4 | year = 2009 | bibcode = 2009EvBio..36..267Y | s2cid = 29901266 }}</ref>
* Suckling: [[tert-Amyl alcohol|TAA]] is present in rabbit milk and seems to play a role of pheromone inducing suckling in the newborn rabbit.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Schaal B, Coureaud G, Langlois D, Giniès C, Sémon E, Perrier G | title = Chemical and behavioural characterization of the rabbit mammary pheromone | journal = Nature | volume = 424 | issue = 6944 | pages = 68–72 | date = July 2003 | pmid = 12840760 | doi = 10.1038/nature01739 | s2cid = 4428155 | bibcode = 2003Natur.424...68S }}</ref>


==Categorization by type==
==Human pheromones==
===Releaser===
Releaser pheromones are pheromones that cause an alteration in the behavior of the recipient. For example, some organisms use powerful attractant molecules to attract mates from a distance of two miles or more. In general, this type of pheromone elicits a rapid response, but is quickly degraded. In contrast, a primer pheromone has a slower onset and a longer duration. For example, rabbit (mothers) release mammary pheromones that trigger immediate nursing behavior by their babies.<ref name="users.rcn.com">{{Cite web |url=http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/P/Pheromones.html |title=Kimball, J.W. Pheromones. ''Kimball's Biology Pages''. Sep 2008 |access-date=2008-11-01 |archive-date=2018-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180121113903/http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/P/Pheromones.html |url-status=dead }}</ref>


===Primer===
Some commercially-available substances are advertised using claims that the products contain human sexual pheromones and can act as an [[aphrodisiac]]. These often lack credibility due to an excessive marketing of pheromones by [[Spam (electronic)|unsolicited e-mail]]. Despite claims to the contrary, no defined pheromonal substance has ever been demonstrated to directly influence human behavior in a [[peer review]]ed, published study.
Primer pheromones trigger a change of developmental events (in which they differ from all the other pheromones, which trigger a change in behavior). They were first described in ''[[Desert locust|Schistocerca gregaria]]'' by [[Maud Norris]] in 1954.<ref>{{cite journal| vauthors = Norris MJ |year=1954|title=Sexual maturation in the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria (Forskal), with special reference to the effects of grouping.|journal=Anti-Locust Bulletin|volume=18|pages=1–4}}</ref>


===Signal===
A few well-controlled scientific studies have been published suggesting the ''possibility'' of pheromones in humans, however. The best-studied case involves the synchronization of [[menstrual cycle]]s among women based on unconscious odor cues (the so called ''[[McClintock effect]]'', named after the primary investigator). This study proposes that there are two types of pheromone involved: "One, produced prior to ovulation, shortens the ovarian cycle; and the second, produced just at ovulation, lengthens the cycle". This is analogous to the ''[[Whitten effect]]'',<ref>Whitten, M.K. 1957. Effect of exteroceptive factors on the oestrous cycle of mice. Nature. 180(4599):1436. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=13493564&query_hl=2&itool=pubmed_DocSum]</ref> <ref>Gangrade BK, Dominic CJ. 1984. Studies of the male-originating pheromones involved in the Whitten effect and Bruce effect in mice. Biol Reprod. 31(1):89-96.[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=6540606&dopt=Abstract]</ref> a male pheromone mediated modulation of [[estrus]] observed in mice.
Signal pheromones cause short-term changes, such as the neurotransmitter release that activates a response. For instance, GnRH molecule functions as a neurotransmitter in rats to elicit [[lordosis behavior]].<ref name=Kohl01/>


==Pheromone receptors==
Other studies have suggested that people might be using odor cues associated with the immune system to select mates who are not closely related to themselves. (See [[Disassortative sexual selection]]) Using a brain imaging technique, [[Sweden|Swedish]] researchers have shown that [[Homosexuality|homosexual]] and [[Heterosexuality|heterosexual]] males' brains respond differently to two odours that may be involved in sexual arousal, and that the homosexual men respond in the same way as heterosexual women. According to the researchers, this research suggests a possible role for human pheromones in the biological basis of [[sexual orientation]] <ref>Wade, N. "[http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/09/science/09cnd-smell.html Gay Men are found to have Different Scent of Attraction]." NY Times, May 09</ref>.
<!-- As of 19 March 2018, "Pheromone receptor" and "Pheromone receptors" redirects here; do not change the section heading without adding {{Anchor|Pheromone receptors}} to the header; failing to do so will break those section redirects. -->
Another study demonstrated that the smell of [[androstadienone]], a chemical component of male [[sweat]], maintains higher levels of [[cortisol]] in females. The scientists suggest that the ability of this compound to influence the [[endocrine]] balance of the opposite sex makes it a human pheromonal chemosignal. <ref>Wyart C, Webster WW, Chen JH, Wilson SR, McClary A, Khan RM, Sobel N. 2007. Smelling a single component of male sweat alters levels of cortisol in women. J Neurosci. 27(6):1261-5.[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=17287500&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_docsum]</ref>


===In the olfactory epithelium===
In 2006 it was shown that a second mouse [[odorant receptor|receptor]] sub-class is found in the [[olfactory epithelium]]. Called the [[trace amine-associated receptor]]s (TAAR), some are activated by volatile compounds found in mouse urine, including one putative pheromone.<ref>Liberles SD, Buck LB. 2006. A second class of chemosensory receptors in the olfactory epithelium. Nature. 442(7103):645-50. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=16878137&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_docsum]</ref> [[Ortholog|Orthologous]] receptors exist in humans providing, the authors propose, evidence for a mechanism of human pheromone detection. <ref>Pearson H. 2006. Mouse data hint at human pheromones. Nature. 442(7102):495. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=16885951&query_hl=5&itool=pubmed_docsum]</ref>
{{Further|Trace amine-associated receptor}}
The human [[trace amine-associated receptor]]s are a group of six [[G protein-coupled receptor]]s (i.e., [[TAAR1]], [[TAAR2]], [[TAAR5]], [[TAAR6]], [[TAAR8]], and [[TAAR9]]) that&nbsp;– with exception for TAAR1&nbsp;– are expressed in the human [[olfactory epithelium]].<ref name="IUPHAR TAAR" /> In humans and other animals, TAARs in the [[olfactory epithelium]] function as [[olfactory receptor]]s that detect [[Volatility (chemistry)|volatile]] [[amine]] [[odorant]]s, including certain pheromones;<ref name="IUPHAR TAAR">{{cite web|title=Trace amine receptor: Introduction|url=http://www.iuphar-db.org/DATABASE/FamilyIntroductionForward?familyId=64|publisher=International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology|access-date=15 February 2014|quote=Importantly, three ligands identified activating mouse Taars are natural components of mouse urine, a major source of social cues in rodents. Mouse Taar4 recognizes β-phenylethylamine, a compound whose elevation in urine is correlated with increases in stress and stress responses in both rodents and humans. Both mouse Taar3 and Taar5 detect compounds (isoamylamine and trimethylamine, respectively) that are enriched in male versus female mouse urine. Isoamylamine in male urine is reported to act as a pheromone, accelerating puberty onset in female mice [34]. The authors suggest the Taar family has a chemosensory function that is distinct from odorant receptors with a role associated with the detection of social cues.&nbsp;... The evolutionary pattern of the TAAR gene family is characterized by lineage-specific phylogenetic clustering [26,30,35]. These characteristics are very similar to those observed in the olfactory GPCRs and vomeronasal (V1R, V2R) GPCR gene families.|archive-date=23 February 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140223102849/http://www.iuphar-db.org/DATABASE/FamilyIntroductionForward?familyId=64|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="TAAR 2015 review - olfactory TAARs" /> these TAARs putatively function as a class of pheromone receptors involved in the olfactive detection of social cues.<ref name="IUPHAR TAAR" /><ref name="TAAR 2015 review - olfactory TAARs" />


A review of studies involving non-human animals indicated that TAARs in the olfactory epithelium can mediate [[reward system|attractive]] or [[aversives|aversive]] behavioral responses to a [[receptor agonist]].<ref name="TAAR 2015 review - olfactory TAARs" /> This review also noted that the behavioral response evoked by a TAAR can vary across species (e.g., TAAR5 mediates attraction to [[trimethylamine]] in mice and aversion to trimethylamine in rats).<ref name="TAAR 2015 review - olfactory TAARs">{{cite journal | vauthors = Liberles SD | title = Trace amine-associated receptors: ligands, neural circuits, and behaviors | journal = Current Opinion in Neurobiology | volume = 34 | pages = 1–7 | date = October 2015 | pmid = 25616211 | pmc = 4508243 | doi = 10.1016/j.conb.2015.01.001 | quote = Furthermore, while some TAARs detect aversive odors, TAAR-mediated behaviors can vary across species.&nbsp;... The ability of particular TAARs to mediate aversion and attraction behavior provides an exciting opportunity for mechanistic unraveling of odor valence encoding. }}<br />[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4508243/figure/F2/ Figure 2: Table of ligands, expression patterns, and species-specific behavioral responses for each TAAR]</ref> In humans, hTAAR5 presumably mediates aversion to trimethylamine, which is known to act as an hTAAR5 agonist and to possess a foul, fishy odor that is aversive to humans;<ref name="TAAR 2015 review - olfactory TAARs" /><ref name="hTAAR5 and trimethylamine aversion">{{cite journal | vauthors = Wallrabenstein I, Singer M, Panten J, Hatt H, Gisselmann G | title = Timberol® Inhibits TAAR5-Mediated Responses to Trimethylamine and Influences the Olfactory Threshold in Humans | journal = PLOS ONE | volume = 10 | issue = 12 | pages = e0144704 | date = 2015 | pmid = 26684881 | pmc = 4684214 | doi = 10.1371/journal.pone.0144704 | quote = While mice produce gender-specific amounts of urinary TMA levels and were attracted by TMA, this odor is repellent to rats and aversive to humans [19], indicating that there must be species-specific functions.&nbsp;... Furthermore, a homozygous knockout of murine TAAR5 abolished the attraction behavior to TMA [19]. Thus, it is concluded that TAAR5 itself is sufficient to mediate a behavioral response at least in mice.&nbsp;... Whether the TAAR5 activation by TMA elicits specific behavioral output like avoidance behavior in humans still needs to be examined. | doi-access = free | bibcode = 2015PLoSO..1044704W }}</ref> however, hTAAR5 is not the only olfactory receptor that is responsible for trimethylamine olfaction in humans.<ref name="TAAR 2015 review - olfactory TAARs" /><ref name="hTAAR5 and trimethylamine aversion" /> {{As of|December 2015|post=,}} hTAAR5-mediated trimethylamine aversion has not been examined in published research.<ref name="hTAAR5 and trimethylamine aversion" />
==See also==

{{col-begin}}
===In the vomeronasal organ===
{{col-break}}
{{Further|Vomeronasal receptor}}
In [[reptile]]s, [[amphibia]] and non-primate mammals pheromones are detected by regular [[olfactory]] membranes, and also by the [[vomeronasal organ]] (VNO), or Jacobson's organ, which lies at the base of the [[nasal septum]] between the nose and mouth and is the first stage of the [[accessory olfactory system]].<ref name="PUB00007338">{{cite journal | vauthors = Pantages E, Dulac C | title = A novel family of candidate pheromone receptors in mammals | journal = Neuron | volume = 28 | issue = 3 | pages = 835–845 | date = December 2000 | pmid = 11163270 | doi = 10.1016/S0896-6273(00)00157-4 | doi-access = free }}</ref> While the VNO is present in most amphibia, reptiles, and non-primate mammals,<ref>{{cite book| vauthors = Carlson NR |title=Physiology of behavior|date=2013|publisher=Pearson|location=Boston|isbn=978-0-205-23939-9 |page=335|edition=11th}}</ref> it is absent in [[bird]]s, adult [[catarrhine]] monkeys (downward facing nostrils, as opposed to sideways), and [[ape]]s.<ref name="PUB00007339">{{cite journal | vauthors = Keverne EB | title = The vomeronasal organ | journal = Science | volume = 286 | issue = 5440 | pages = 716–720 | date = October 1999 | pmid = 10531049 | doi = 10.1126/science.286.5440.716 }}</ref> An active role for the human VNO in the detection of pheromones is disputed; while it is clearly present in the [[fetus]] it appears to be [[atrophy|atrophied]], shrunk or completely absent in adults. Three distinct families of [[vomeronasal receptor]]s, putatively pheromone sensing, have been identified in the vomeronasal organ named V1Rs, V2Rs, and V3Rs. All are [[G protein-coupled receptors]] but are only distantly related to the receptors of the main olfactory system, highlighting their different role.<ref name="PUB00007338" />

==Evolution==
Olfactory processing of chemical signals like pheromones exists in all animal phyla and is thus the oldest of the senses.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} It has been suggested that it serves survival by generating appropriate behavioral responses to the signals of threat, sex and dominance status among members of the same species.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Hildebrand JG | title = Analysis of chemical signals by nervous systems | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 92 | issue = 1 | pages = 67–74 | date = January 1995 | pmid = 7816849 | pmc = 42818 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.92.1.67 | doi-access = free | bibcode = 1995PNAS...92...67H }}</ref>

Furthermore, it has been suggested that in the evolution of [[unicellular]] [[prokaryote]]s to [[multicellular]] [[eukaryote]]s, primordial pheromone signaling between individuals may have evolved to [[paracrine]] and [[endocrine signaling]] within individual organisms.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Stoka AM | title = Phylogeny and evolution of chemical communication: an endocrine approach | journal = Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 207–225 | date = June 1999 | pmid = 10343281 | doi = 10.1677/jme.0.0220207 | doi-access = free }}</ref>

Some authors assume that approach-avoidance reactions in animals, elicited by chemical cues, form the phylogenetic basis for the experience of emotions in humans.<ref>R.S. Herz, T. Engen, Odor memory: review and analysis, Psychon. Bull.
Rev. 3 (1996) 300–313.</ref>

===Evolution of sex pheromones===
====Avoidance of inbreeding====
{{see also|Inbreeding avoidance}}
Mice can distinguish close relatives from more distantly related individuals on the basis of scent signals,<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Sherborne AL, Thom MD, Paterson S, Jury F, Ollier WE, Stockley P, Beynon RJ, Hurst JL | display-authors = 6 | title = The genetic basis of inbreeding avoidance in house mice | journal = Current Biology | volume = 17 | issue = 23 | pages = 2061–2066 | date = December 2007 | pmid = 17997307 | pmc = 2148465 | doi = 10.1016/j.cub.2007.10.041 | bibcode = 2007CBio...17.2061S }}</ref> which enables them to avoid mating with close relatives and minimizes deleterious [[inbreeding]].<ref name=Jimenez>{{cite journal | vauthors = Jiménez JA, Hughes KA, Alaks G, Graham L, Lacy RC | title = An experimental study of inbreeding depression in a natural habitat | journal = Science | volume = 266 | issue = 5183 | pages = 271–273 | date = October 1994 | pmid = 7939661 | doi = 10.1126/science.7939661 | author-link2 = Kimberly Hughes | bibcode = 1994Sci...266..271J }}</ref>

In addition to mice, two species of bumblebee, in particular [[Bombus bifarius]] and [[Bombus frigidus]], have been observed to use pheromones as a means of kin recognition to avoid inbreeding.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|title = Nestmate Recognition as an Inbreeding Avoidance Mechanism in Bumble Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae)| vauthors = Foster RL |date = 1992|journal = Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society|issue = 3|volume = 65|pages = 238–243 |jstor=25085362}}</ref> For example, B. bifarius males display "patrolling" behavior in which they mark specific paths outside their nests with pheromones and subsequently "patrol" these paths.<ref name=":0" /> Unrelated reproductive females are attracted to the pheromones deposited by males on these paths, and males that encounter these females while patrolling can mate with them.<ref name=":0" /> Other bees of the Bombus species are found to emit pheromones as precopulatory signals, such as ''[[Bombus lapidarius]]''.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Martin SJ, Carruthers JM, Williams PH, Drijfhout FP | title = Host specific social parasites (Psithyrus) indicate chemical recognition system in bumblebees | journal = Journal of Chemical Ecology | volume = 36 | issue = 8 | pages = 855–863 | date = August 2010 | pmid = 20509042 | doi = 10.1007/s10886-010-9805-3 | bibcode = 2010JCEco..36..855M | s2cid = 4794525 }}</ref>

==Applications==

===Pheromone trapping===
{{Main|Pheromone trap}}
Pheromones of certain pest insect species, such as the [[Japanese beetle]], [[acrobat ant]], and the [[spongy moth]], can be used to trap the respective insect for monitoring purposes, to control the population by creating confusion, to disrupt mating, and to prevent further egg laying.

===Animal husbandry===
Pheromones are used in the detection of [[oestrus]] in [[Pig|sows]]. [[Boar]] pheromones are sprayed into the [[wikt:sty|sty]], and those sows that exhibit [[sexual arousal]] are known to be currently available for breeding.

==Human sex pheromone controversies==
{{further|Human sex pheromones}}
{{See also|Body odor|List of neurosteroids#Pheromones and pherines}}

While humans are highly dependent upon visual cues, when in close proximity smells also play a role in sociosexual behaviors. An inherent difficulty in studying human pheromones is the need for cleanliness and odorlessness in human participants.<ref name= Grammer>{{cite journal | vauthors = Grammer K, Fink B, Neave N | title = Human pheromones and sexual attraction | journal = European Journal of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Biology | volume = 118 | issue = 2 | pages = 135–142 | date = February 2005 | pmid = 15653193 | doi = 10.1016/j.ejogrb.2004.08.010 }}</ref> Though various researchers have investigated the possibility of their existence, no pheromonal substance has ever been demonstrated to directly influence human behavior in a [[peer review]]ed study.<ref name="wy">Wyatt, Tristram D. (2003). ''Pheromones and Animal Behaviour: Communication by Smell and Taste.'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN | 0-521-48526-6}}. p.&nbsp;298 Quoting Preti & Weski (1999) "No peer reviewed data supporting the presences of ... human ... pheromones that cause rapid behavioral changes, such as attraction and/or [[sexual intercourse|copulation]] have been documented."</ref><ref name = "Warren S. T. Hays">{{cite journal | vauthors = Hays WS | year = 2003 | title = Human pheromones: have they been demonstrated? | doi = 10.1007/s00265-003-0613-4 | journal = Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | volume = 54 | issue = 2 | pages = 89–97 | s2cid = 37400635 }}</ref><ref name="Neu">{{cite book | vauthors = Bear MF, Connors BW, Paradiso MA | year = 2006 | title =Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain| publisher = Lippincott Williams & Wilkins| url = https://archive.org/details/neuroscienceexpl00mark| url-access =registration| quote =neuroscience exploring the brain.| isbn =978-0-7817-6003-4}} p. 264 ...there has not yet been any hard evidence for human pheromones that might [change] sexual attraction (for members of either sex) [naturally]</ref><ref name="Riley 2016">{{cite news | vauthors = Riley A |url=http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20160509-the-tantalising-truth-about-sex-pheromones |title=Pheromones are probably not why people find you attractive |work=BBC News |date=9 May 2016 |access-date=2016-05-09 }}</ref> Experiments have focused on three classes of possible human pheromones: axillary steroids, vaginal aliphatic acids, and stimulators of the [[vomeronasal organ]], including [https://academic.oup.com/scan/article/14/7/719/5532402 this 2018 study] claiming pheromones affect men's sexual cognition.

=== Axillary steroids ===
Axillary steroids are produced by the [[Testicle|testes]], [[Ovary|ovaries]], [[apocrine]] glands, and [[adrenal gland]]s.<ref name= Hays>{{cite journal| vauthors = Hays WS | title= Human pheromones: have they been demonstrated?| journal= Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology| volume= 54| issue= 2| pages=89–97| year=2003| doi=10.1007/s00265-003-0613-4| s2cid= 37400635}}</ref> These chemicals are not biologically active until puberty when sex steroids influence their activity.<ref name= Mostafa>{{cite journal| vauthors = Mostafa T, El Khouly G, Hassan A | title= Pheromones in sex and reproduction: Do they have a role in humans?| journal= Journal of Advanced Research| volume= 3| issue=1| pages=1–9| year=2012| doi= 10.1016/j.jare.2011.03.003| doi-access= free}}</ref> The change in activity during puberty suggest that humans may communicate through odors.<ref name= Hays/> Several axillary steroids have been described as possible human pheromones: [[androstadienol]], [[androstadienone]], [[androstenol]], [[androstenone]], and [[androsterone]].
* Androstenol is the putative female pheromone.<ref name= Mostafa/> In a 1978 study by Kirk-Smith, people wearing surgical masks treated with androstenol or untreated were shown pictures of people, animals and buildings and asked to rate the pictures on attractiveness.<ref name= Kirk-Smith>{{cite journal| vauthors = Kirk-Smith M | title= Human social attitudes affected by androstenol| journal= Research Communications in Psychology, Psychiatry & Behavior| volume= 3| issue= 4| pages= 379–384| year= 1978 |issn=0362-2428}}</ref> Individuals with their masks treated with androstenol rated their photographs as being "warmer" and "more friendly".<ref name= Kirk-Smith/> The best-known case study involves the synchronization of [[menstrual cycle]]s among women based on unconscious odor cues, the ''[[McClintock effect]]'', named after the primary investigator, [[Martha McClintock]], of the University of Chicago.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = McClintock MK | title = Menstrual synchorony and suppression | journal = Nature | volume = 229 | issue = 5282 | pages = 244–245 | date = January 1971 | pmid = 4994256 | doi = 10.1038/229244a0 | s2cid = 4267390 | bibcode = 1971Natur.229..244M }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Stern K, McClintock MK | title = Regulation of ovulation by human pheromones | journal = Nature | volume = 392 | issue = 6672 | pages = 177–179 | date = March 1998 | pmid = 9515961 | doi = 10.1038/32408 | s2cid = 4426700 | bibcode = 1998Natur.392..177S }}.</ref> A group of women were exposed to a whiff of perspiration from other women. Depending on the time in the month the sweat was collected (before, during, or after ovulation) there was an association with the recipient woman's menstrual cycle to speed up or slow down. The 1971 study proposed two types of pheromone involved: "One, produced prior to ovulation, shortens the ovarian cycle; and the second, produced just at ovulation, lengthens the cycle". However, recent studies and reviews of the methodology have called the validity of her results and existence of menstrual synchronization into question.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Yang Z, Schank JC | title = Women do not synchronize their menstrual cycles | journal = Human Nature | volume = 17 | issue = 4 | pages = 433–447 | date = December 2006 | pmid = 26181612 | doi = 10.1007/s12110-006-1005-z | s2cid = 2316864 }}{{Dead link|date=March 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Strassmann BI | title = Menstrual synchrony pheromones: cause for doubt | journal = Human Reproduction | volume = 14 | issue = 3 | pages = 579–580 | date = March 1999 | pmid = 10221677 | doi = 10.1093/humrep/14.3.579 | doi-access = free }}</ref>
* Androstenone is postulated to be secreted only by males as an attractant for women, and thought to be a positive [[Effector (biology)|effector]] for their mood. It seems to have different effects on women, depending on where a female is in her menstrual cycle, with the highest sensitivity to it during ovulation.<ref name= Mostafa/> In 1983, study participants exposed to androstenone were shown to undergo changes in skin conductance.<ref name="Van Toller">{{cite journal | vauthors = Van Toller C, Kirk-Smith M, Wood N, Lombard J, Dodd GH | title = Skin conductance and subjective assessments associated with the odour of 5-alpha-androstan-3-one | journal = Biological Psychology | volume = 16 | issue = 1–2 | pages = 85–107 | year = 1983 | pmid = 6682682 | doi = 10.1016/0301-0511(83)90056-X | s2cid = 54325922 }}</ref> Androstenone has been found to be perceived as more pleasant to women during their time of ovulation.<ref name= Grammer/>
* Androstadienone seems to affect the limbic system and causes a positive reaction in women, improving mood.<ref name= Hays/> Responses to androstadienone depend on the individual and the environment they are in.<ref name= Hummer>{{cite journal | vauthors = Hummer TA, McClintock MK | title = Putative human pheromone androstadienone attunes the mind specifically to emotional information | journal = Hormones and Behavior | volume = 55 | issue = 4 | pages = 548–559 | date = April 2009 | pmid = 19470369 | doi = 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2009.01.002 | s2cid = 17022112 }}</ref> Androstadienone negatively influences{{how|date=February 2014}} the perception of pain in women.<ref name = Hummer/> Women tend to react positively after androstadienone presentation, while men react more negatively. In an experiment by Hummer and McClintock, androstadienone or a control odor was put on the upper lips of fifty males and females and they were tested for four effects of the pheromone: 1) automatic attention towards positive and negative facial expressions, 2) the strength of cognitive and emotional information as distractors in a simple reaction time task, 3) relative attention to social and nonsocial stimuli (i.e. neutral faces), and 4) mood and attentiveness in the absence of social interaction. Those treated with androstadienone drew more attention to towards emotional facial expressions and emotional words but no increased attention to neutral faces. These data suggest that androstadienone may increase attention to emotional information causing the individual to feel more focused. It is thought that androstadienone modulates on how the mind attends and processes information.<ref name= Hummer/>

While it may be expected on evolutionary grounds that humans have pheromones, these three molecules have yet to be rigorously proven to act as such. Research in this field has suffered from small sample sizes, [[publication bias]], false positives, and poor methodology.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Wyatt TD | title = The search for human pheromones: the lost decades and the necessity of returning to first principles | journal = Proceedings. Biological Sciences | volume = 282 | issue = 1804 | pages = 20142994 | date = April 2015 | pmid = 25740891 | pmc = 4375873 | doi = 10.1098/rspb.2014.2994 }}</ref>

=== Vaginal aliphatic acids ===
A class of aliphatic acids (volatile [[fatty acids]] as a kind of [[carboxylic acid]]) was found in female [[rhesus monkey]]s that produced six types in the vaginal fluids.<ref name= Michael>{{cite journal | vauthors = Michael RP, Bonsall RW, Kutner M | title = Volatile fatty acids, "copulins", in human vaginal secretions | journal = Psychoneuroendocrinology | volume = 1 | issue = 2 | pages = 153–163 | year = 1975 | pmid = 1234654 | doi = 10.1016/0306-4530(75)90007-4 | s2cid = 38274482 | title-link = copulin }}</ref> The combination of these acids is referred to as "copulins". One of the acids, acetic acid, was found in all of the sampled female's vaginal fluid.<ref name= Michael/> Even in humans, one-third of women have all six types of copulins, which increase in quantity before ovulation.<ref name= Michael/> Copulins are used to signal ovulation; however, as human ovulation is concealed it is thought that they may be used for reasons other than sexual communication.<ref name= Hays/>

=== Stimulators of the vomeronasal organ ===
The human [[vomeronasal organ]] has [[epithelia]] that may be able to serve as a chemical sensory organ; however, the genes that encode the VNO receptors are nonfunctional [[pseudogene]]s in humans.<ref name= Grammer/> Also, while there are sensory neurons in the human VNO there seem to be no connections between the VNO and the central nervous system. The associated olfactory bulb is present in the fetus, but regresses and vanishes in the adult brain. There have been some reports that the human VNO does function, but only responds to hormones in a "sex-specific manner". There also have been pheromone receptor genes found in olfactory mucosa.<ref name= Grammer/> There have been no experiments that compare people lacking the VNO, and people that have it. It is disputed on whether the chemicals are reaching the brain through the VNO or other tissues.<ref name= Hays/>

In 2006, it was shown that a second mouse [[odorant receptor|receptor]] sub-class is found in the [[olfactory epithelium]]. Called the [[trace amine-associated receptor]]s (TAAR), some are activated by volatile [[amine]]s found in mouse urine, including one putative mouse pheromone.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Liberles SD, Buck LB | title = A second class of chemosensory receptors in the olfactory epithelium | journal = Nature | volume = 442 | issue = 7103 | pages = 645–650 | date = August 2006 | pmid = 16878137 | doi = 10.1038/nature05066 | s2cid = 2864195 | bibcode = 2006Natur.442..645L }}</ref> [[Ortholog]]ous receptors exist in humans providing, the authors propose, evidence for a mechanism of human pheromone detection.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Pearson H | title = Mouse data hint at human pheromones | journal = Nature | volume = 442 | issue = 7102 | pages = 495 | date = August 2006 | pmid = 16885951 | doi = 10.1038/442495a | bibcode = 2006Natur.442..495P | doi-access = free }}</ref>

Although there are disputes about the mechanisms by which pheromones function, there is evidence that pheromones do affect humans.<ref name= Wysocki>{{cite journal | vauthors = Wysocki CJ, Preti G | title = Facts, fallacies, fears, and frustrations with human pheromones | journal = The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology | volume = 281 | issue = 1 | pages = 1201–1211 | date = November 2004 | pmid = 15470677 | doi = 10.1002/ar.a.20125 | doi-access = free }}</ref> Despite this evidence, it has not been conclusively shown that humans have functional pheromones. Those experiments suggesting that certain pheromones have a positive effect on humans are countered by others indicating they have no effect whatsoever.<ref name= Hays/>

A possible theory being studied now is that these axillary odors are being used to provide information about the immune system. Milinski and colleagues found that the artificial odors that people chose are determined in part by their [[major histocompatibility complex]]es (MHC) combination.<ref name= Milinski>{{cite journal | vauthors = Milinski M | title= Evidence for MHC-correlated perfume preferences in humans| journal= Behavioral Ecology| volume= 12| issue= 2| pages= 140–9| year= 2001 |doi=10.1093/beheco/12.2.140 | doi-access= free}}</ref> Information about an individual's immune system could be used as a way of "sexual selection" so that the female could obtain good genes for her offspring.<ref name= Grammer/> [[Claus Wedekind]] and colleagues found that both men and women prefer the axillary odors of people whose MHC is different from their own.<ref name= "Wedekind">{{cite journal | vauthors = Wedekind C, Seebeck T, Bettens F, Paepke AJ | title = MHC-dependent mate preferences in humans | journal = Proceedings. Biological Sciences | volume = 260 | issue = 1359 | pages = 245–249 | date = June 1995 | pmid = 7630893 | doi = 10.1098/rspb.1995.0087 | s2cid = 34971350 | bibcode = 1995RSPSB.260..245W }}</ref>

Some body spray advertisers claim that their products contain human sexual pheromones that act as an [[aphrodisiac]]. Despite these claims, no pheromonal substance has ever been demonstrated to directly influence human behavior in a [[peer review]]ed study.<ref name = Hays/><ref name="Neu"/>{{Disputed inline|Dated claim of no demonstration in peer-reviewed studies|date=March 2018}} Thus, the role of pheromones in human behavior remains speculative and controversial.<ref name = Purves>{{cite book | vauthors = Purves D, Brannon EM, Cabeza R, LaBar KS, Huettel SA, Platt ML, Woldorff M | title = Principles of Cognitive Neuroscience | publisher = Sinauer | year = 2008 | isbn=978-0-87893-694-6}}</ref>

== See also ==
{{div col|colwidth=25em}}
* [[Aphrodisiac]]
* [[Allomone]]
* [[Allomone]]
* [[Androstenol]]
* [[Ant mill]]
* [[Androstenone]]
* [[Cat pheromone]]
* [[Civetone]]
* [[Estratetraenol]]
* [[Estratetraenol]]
* [[Kairomone]]
* [[Honey bee pheromones]]
* [[Honey bee pheromones]]
* [[Pheromones in fiction]]
* [[Insect pheromones]]
* [[Kairomone]]
{{col-break}}
* [[List of neurosteroids]]
* [[Major urinary proteins]]
* [[Membrane steroid receptor]]
* [[Osmeterium]], an organ in swallowtail caterpillars
* [[Pherine]]
* [[Pheromone trap]]
* [[Quorum sensing]]
* [[Quorum sensing]]
* [[Semiochemical]]
* [[Semiochemical]]
* [[Vomeronasal organ]]
* [[Stigmergy]]
* [[Chemical ecology]]
* [[Osmeterium]], an organ in swallowtail caterpillars
{{div col end}}
* [[Body odor]]: [[sweat]]
{{col-end}}


==References==
== References ==
{{reflist|30em}}
<references />


==Further reading==
== Further reading ==
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Wilson EO, Bossert WH | title = Chemical Communication Among Animals | journal = Recent Progress in Hormone Research | volume = 19 | pages = 673–716 | year = 1963 | pmid = 14284035 | author-link = E. O. Wilson }}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Kohl JV, Atzmueller M, Fink B, Grammer K | title = Human pheromones: integrating neuroendocrinology and ethology | journal = Neuro Endocrinology Letters | volume = 22 | issue = 5 | pages = 309–321 | date = October 2001 | pmid = 11600881 | url = http://evolution.anthro.univie.ac.at/institutes/urbanethology/resources/pdf/NEL220501R01_.pdf }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Wyatt TD | date = 2003 | title = Pheromones and Animal Behaviour: Communication by Smell and Taste. | location = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | isbn = 978-0-521-48526-5 }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Dusenbery DB | date = 2009 | title = Living at Micro Scale | publisher = Harvard University Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 978-0-674-03116-6}}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Preti G, Wysocki CJ, Barnhart KT, Sondheimer SJ, Leyden JJ | title = Male axillary extracts contain pheromones that affect pulsatile secretion of luteinizing hormone and mood in women recipients | journal = Biology of Reproduction | volume = 68 | issue = 6 | pages = 2107–2113 | date = June 2003 | pmid = 12606409 | doi = 10.1095/biolreprod.102.008268 | s2cid = 29125811 | doi-access = }}
{{refend}}


== External links ==
*Kohl, JV., Atzmueller, M., Fink, B. & Grammer, K. (2001). Human Pheromones: Integrating Neuroendocrinology and Ethology. ''Neuroendocrinology Letters, 22(5),'' 319-331. [http://evolution.anthro.univie.ac.at/institutes/urbanethology/resources/pdf/NEL220501R01_.pdf Full text]
* [http://www.pherobase.com/ Pherobase], the database of insect pheromones
* [https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sexual-orientation-in-the-brain/ Sexual Orientation, in the Brain]


{{Pheromones and pherines}}
*Liberles, S.D., [[Linda Buck|Buck, L.B.]] (2006). A second class of chemosensory receptors in the olfactory epithelium. ''Nature, 442,'' 645-50.
{{Authority control}}


*McClintock, M.K. (1984). Estrous synchrony: modulation of ovarian cycle length by female pheromones. ''Physiological Behavior, 32,'' 701-705.

*[[Edward O. Wilson|Wilson, E. O.]], Bossert, W. H. (1963). Chemical communication among animals. ''Recent Progress in Hormone Research, 19,'' 673-716.

*Wyatt, Tristram D. (2003). ''Pheromones and Animal Behaviour: Communication by Smell and Taste.'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-48526-6.

==External links==
<!--NO COMMERCIAL SITES PLEASE-->
*[http://www.pherobase.com/ Pherobase], the database of insect pheromones
*[http://www.sfsu.edu/~news/prsrelea/fy01/091.htm SFSU study shows that synthetic pheromones in women's perfume increase intimate contact with men]
*[http://www.biolreprod.org/cgi/content/full/68/6/2107 Male Axillary Extracts Contain Pheromones that Affect Pulsatile Secretion of Luteinizing Hormone and Mood in Women Recipients]
*[http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/05/09/tech/main694078.shtml Sexual Orientation, in the Brain]
*[http://www.ondwelle.com/OSM03.pdf Review of published debate about HOW insects detect pheromones over large distances, even when the wind seems unfavourable]
*[http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/02/06_sweat.shtml Male sweat boosts women's hormone levels] -- from [[UC Berkeley]], February 2007
*[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/02/070207172019.htm The Effect of Male Sweat on Women's Hormone Levels] -- from ''Science Daily'', February 2007
*[http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=healthNews&storyID=2007-02-08T144216Z_01_N07442693_RTRUKOC_0_US-MEN-SWEAT.xml For women, nothing's like the smell of men's sweat] -- from [[Reuters]] (February 2007)
*[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/03/030317074228.htm Pheromones In Male Perspiration Reduce Women's Tension, Alter Hormone Response] -- from ''Science Daily'' (March 2003)

[[Category:Biochemistry]]
[[Category:Pheromones|*]]
[[Category:Pheromones|*]]
[[Category:Endocrinology]]

[[Category:Chemical ecology]]
[[ar:فرمون]]
[[bg:Феромон]]
[[ca:Feromona]]
[[da:Feromon]]
[[de:Pheromon]]
[[el:Φερομόνη]]
[[es:Feromona]]
[[fr:Phéromone]]
[[id:Feromon]]
[[it:Feromone]]
[[he:פרומון]]
[[lt:Feromonas]]
[[nl:Feromoon]]
[[ja:フェロモン]]
[[no:Feromon]]
[[pl:Feromony]]
[[pt:Feromônio]]
[[ru:Феромоны]]
[[su:Féromon]]
[[fi:Feromoni]]
[[sv:Feromon]]
[[zh:信息素]]

Latest revision as of 08:53, 8 November 2024

A fanning honeybee exposes Nasonov's gland (white – at tip of abdomen) releasing pheromone to entice swarm into an empty hive

A pheromone (from Ancient Greek φέρω (phérō) 'to bear' and hormone) is a secreted or excreted chemical factor that triggers a social response in members of the same species. Pheromones are chemicals capable of acting like hormones outside the body of the secreting individual, to affect the behavior of the receiving individuals.[1] There are alarm pheromones, food trail pheromones, sex pheromones, and many others that affect behavior or physiology. Pheromones are used by many organisms, from basic unicellular prokaryotes to complex multicellular eukaryotes.[2] Their use among insects has been particularly well documented. In addition, some vertebrates, plants and ciliates communicate by using pheromones. The ecological functions and evolution of pheromones are a major topic of research in the field of chemical ecology.[3]

Background

[edit]

The portmanteau word "pheromone" was coined by Peter Karlson and Martin Lüscher in 1959, based on the Greek φέρω phérō ('I carry') and ὁρμων hórmōn ('stimulating').[4] Pheromones are also sometimes classified as ecto-hormones. They were researched earlier by various scientists, including Jean-Henri Fabre, Joseph A. Lintner, Adolf Butenandt, and ethologist Karl von Frisch who called them various names, like for instance "alarm substances". These chemical messengers are transported outside of the body and affect neurocircuits, including the autonomous nervous system with hormone or cytokine mediated physiological changes, inflammatory signaling, immune system changes and/or behavioral change in the recipient.[5] They proposed the term to describe chemical signals from conspecifics that elicit innate behaviors soon after the German biochemist Adolf Butenandt had characterized the first such chemical, bombykol, a chemically well-characterized pheromone released by the female silkworm to attract mates.[6]

Categorization by function

[edit]

Aggregation

[edit]
Aggregation of bug nymphs
Aggregation of the water springtail Podura aquatica

Aggregation pheromones function in mate choice, overcoming host resistance by mass attack, and defense against predators. A group of individuals at one location is referred to as an aggregation, whether consisting of one sex or both sexes. Male-produced sex attractants have been called aggregation pheromones, because they usually result in the arrival of both sexes at a calling site and increase the density of conspecifics surrounding the pheromone source. Most sex pheromones are produced by the females; only a small percentage of sex attractants are produced by males.[7] Aggregation pheromones have been found in members of the Coleoptera, Collembola,[8] Diptera, Hemiptera, Dictyoptera, and Orthoptera. In recent decades, aggregation pheromones have proven useful in the management of many pests, such as the boll weevil (Anthonomus grandis), the pea and bean weevil (Sitona lineatus, and stored product weevils (e.g. Sitophilus zeamais, Sitophilus granarius, and Sitophilus oryzae). Aggregation pheromones are among the most ecologically selective pest suppression methods. They are non-toxic and effective at very low concentrations.[9]

Alarm

[edit]

Some species release a volatile substance when attacked by a predator that can trigger flight (in aphids) or aggression (in ants, bees, termites, and wasps)[10][11][12][13][14] in members of the same species. For example, Vespula squamosa use alarm pheromones to alert others to a threat.[15] In Polistes exclamans, alarm pheromones are also used as an alert to incoming predators.[16] Pheromones also exist in plants: Certain plants emit alarm pheromones when grazed upon, resulting in tannin production in neighboring plants.[17] These tannins make the plants less appetizing to herbivores.[17]

An alarm pheromone has been documented in a mammalian species. Alarmed pronghorn, Antilocapra americana flair their white rump hair and exposes two highly odoriferous glands that releases a compound described having the odor "reminiscent of buttered popcorn". This sends a message to other pronghorns by both sight and smell about a present danger. This scent has been observed by humans 20 to 30 meters downwind from alarmed animals. The major odour compound identified from this gland is 2-pyrrolidinone.[18]

Epideictic

[edit]

Epideictic pheromones are different from territory pheromones, when it comes to insects. Fabre observed and noted how "females who lay their eggs in these fruits deposit these mysterious substances in the vicinity of their clutch to signal to other females of the same species they should clutch elsewhere." It may be helpful to note that the word epideictic, having to do with display or show (from the Greek 'deixis'), has a different but related meaning in rhetoric, the human art of persuasion by means of words.

Territorial

[edit]
Dogs communicate using pheromones and olfactory signals in urine.[19]

Laid down in the environment, territorial pheromones mark the boundaries and identity of an organism's territory. Cats and dogs deposit these pheromones by urinating on landmarks that mark the perimeter of the claimed territory. In social seabirds, the preen gland is used to mark nests, nuptial gifts, and territory boundaries with behavior formerly described as 'displacement activity'.[20]

Trail

[edit]

Social insects commonly use trail pheromones. For example, ants mark their paths with pheromones consisting of volatile hydrocarbons. Certain ants lay down an initial trail of pheromones as they return to the nest with food. This trail attracts other ants and serves as a guide.[21] As long as the food source remains available, visiting ants will continuously renew the pheromone trail. The pheromone requires continuous renewal because it evaporates quickly. When the food supply begins to dwindle, the trail-making ceases. Pharaoh ants (Monomorium pharaonis) mark trails that no longer lead to food with a repellent pheromone, which causes avoidance behaviour in ants.[22] Repellent trail markers may help ants to undertake more efficient collective exploration.[23] The army ant Eciton burchellii provides an example of using pheromones to mark and maintain foraging paths. When species of wasps such as Polybia sericea found new nests, they use pheromones to lead the rest of the colony to the new nesting site.

Gregarious caterpillars, such as the forest tent caterpillar, lay down pheromone trails that are used to achieve group movement.[24]

Sex

[edit]
Male Danaus chrysippus showing the pheromone pouch and brush-like organ in Kerala, India

In animals, sex pheromones indicate the availability of the female for breeding. Male animals may also emit pheromones that convey information about their species and genotype.

At the microscopic level, a number of bacterial species (e.g. Bacillus subtilis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Bacillus cereus) release specific chemicals into the surrounding media to induce the "competent" state in neighboring bacteria.[25] Competence is a physiological state that allows bacterial cells to take up DNA from other cells and incorporate this DNA into their own genome, a sexual process called transformation.

Among eukaryotic microorganisms, pheromones promote sexual interaction in numerous species.[26] These species include the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the filamentous fungi Neurospora crassa and Mucor mucedo, the water mold Achlya ambisexualis, the aquatic fungus Allomyces macrogynus, the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum, the ciliate protozoan Blepharisma japonicum and the multicellular green algae Volvox carteri. In addition, male copepods can follow a three-dimensional pheromone trail left by a swimming female, and male gametes of many animals use a pheromone to help find a female gamete for fertilization.[27]

Many well-studied insect species, such as the ant Leptothorax acervorum, the moths Helicoverpa zea and Agrotis ipsilon, the bee Xylocopa sonorina, the frog Pseudophryne bibronii, and the butterfly Edith's checkerspot release sex pheromones to attract a mate, and some lepidopterans (moths and butterflies) can detect a potential mate from as far away as 10 km (6.2 mi).[28][29] Some insects, such as ghost moths, use pheromones during lek mating.[30] Traps containing pheromones are used by farmers to detect and monitor insect populations in orchards. In addition, Colias eurytheme butterflies release pheromones, an olfactory cue important for mate selection.[31] In mealworm beetles, Tenebrio molitor, the female preference of pheromones is dependent on the nutritional condition of the males.

The effect of Hz-2V virus infection on the reproductive physiology and behavior of female Helicoverpa zea moths is that in the absence of males they exhibited calling behavior and called as often but for shorter periods on average than control females. Even after these contacts virus-infected females made many frequent contacts with males and continued to call; they were found to produce five to seven times more pheromone and attracted twice as many males as did control females in flight tunnel experiments.[32]

Pheromones are also utilized by bee and wasp species. Some pheromones can be used to suppress the sexual behavior of other individuals allowing for a reproductive monopoly – the wasp R. marginata uses this.[33] With regard to the Bombus hyperboreus species, males, otherwise known as drones, patrol circuits of scent marks (pheromones) to find queens.[34] In particular, pheromones for the Bombus hyperboreus, include octadecenol, 2,3-dihydro-6-transfarnesol, citronellol, and geranylcitronellol.[35]

Sea urchins release pheromones into the surrounding water, sending a chemical message that triggers other urchins in the colony to eject their sex cells simultaneously.

In plants, some homosporous ferns release a chemical called antheridiogen, which affects sex expression. This is very similar to pheromones.

Other

[edit]

This classification, based on the effects on behavior, remains artificial. Pheromones fill many additional functions.

  • Nasonov pheromones (worker bees)
  • Royal pheromones (bees)
  • Calming (appeasement) pheromones (mammals)
  • Necromones, given off by a deceased and decomposing organism; consisting of oleic and linoleic acids, they allow crustaceans and hexapods to identify the presence of dead conspecifics.[36]
  • Suckling: TAA is present in rabbit milk and seems to play a role of pheromone inducing suckling in the newborn rabbit.[37]

Categorization by type

[edit]

Releaser

[edit]

Releaser pheromones are pheromones that cause an alteration in the behavior of the recipient. For example, some organisms use powerful attractant molecules to attract mates from a distance of two miles or more. In general, this type of pheromone elicits a rapid response, but is quickly degraded. In contrast, a primer pheromone has a slower onset and a longer duration. For example, rabbit (mothers) release mammary pheromones that trigger immediate nursing behavior by their babies.[20]

Primer

[edit]

Primer pheromones trigger a change of developmental events (in which they differ from all the other pheromones, which trigger a change in behavior). They were first described in Schistocerca gregaria by Maud Norris in 1954.[38]

Signal

[edit]

Signal pheromones cause short-term changes, such as the neurotransmitter release that activates a response. For instance, GnRH molecule functions as a neurotransmitter in rats to elicit lordosis behavior.[5]

Pheromone receptors

[edit]

In the olfactory epithelium

[edit]

The human trace amine-associated receptors are a group of six G protein-coupled receptors (i.e., TAAR1, TAAR2, TAAR5, TAAR6, TAAR8, and TAAR9) that – with exception for TAAR1 – are expressed in the human olfactory epithelium.[39] In humans and other animals, TAARs in the olfactory epithelium function as olfactory receptors that detect volatile amine odorants, including certain pheromones;[39][40] these TAARs putatively function as a class of pheromone receptors involved in the olfactive detection of social cues.[39][40]

A review of studies involving non-human animals indicated that TAARs in the olfactory epithelium can mediate attractive or aversive behavioral responses to a receptor agonist.[40] This review also noted that the behavioral response evoked by a TAAR can vary across species (e.g., TAAR5 mediates attraction to trimethylamine in mice and aversion to trimethylamine in rats).[40] In humans, hTAAR5 presumably mediates aversion to trimethylamine, which is known to act as an hTAAR5 agonist and to possess a foul, fishy odor that is aversive to humans;[40][41] however, hTAAR5 is not the only olfactory receptor that is responsible for trimethylamine olfaction in humans.[40][41] As of December 2015, hTAAR5-mediated trimethylamine aversion has not been examined in published research.[41]

In the vomeronasal organ

[edit]

In reptiles, amphibia and non-primate mammals pheromones are detected by regular olfactory membranes, and also by the vomeronasal organ (VNO), or Jacobson's organ, which lies at the base of the nasal septum between the nose and mouth and is the first stage of the accessory olfactory system.[42] While the VNO is present in most amphibia, reptiles, and non-primate mammals,[43] it is absent in birds, adult catarrhine monkeys (downward facing nostrils, as opposed to sideways), and apes.[44] An active role for the human VNO in the detection of pheromones is disputed; while it is clearly present in the fetus it appears to be atrophied, shrunk or completely absent in adults. Three distinct families of vomeronasal receptors, putatively pheromone sensing, have been identified in the vomeronasal organ named V1Rs, V2Rs, and V3Rs. All are G protein-coupled receptors but are only distantly related to the receptors of the main olfactory system, highlighting their different role.[42]

Evolution

[edit]

Olfactory processing of chemical signals like pheromones exists in all animal phyla and is thus the oldest of the senses.[citation needed] It has been suggested that it serves survival by generating appropriate behavioral responses to the signals of threat, sex and dominance status among members of the same species.[45]

Furthermore, it has been suggested that in the evolution of unicellular prokaryotes to multicellular eukaryotes, primordial pheromone signaling between individuals may have evolved to paracrine and endocrine signaling within individual organisms.[46]

Some authors assume that approach-avoidance reactions in animals, elicited by chemical cues, form the phylogenetic basis for the experience of emotions in humans.[47]

Evolution of sex pheromones

[edit]

Avoidance of inbreeding

[edit]

Mice can distinguish close relatives from more distantly related individuals on the basis of scent signals,[48] which enables them to avoid mating with close relatives and minimizes deleterious inbreeding.[49]

In addition to mice, two species of bumblebee, in particular Bombus bifarius and Bombus frigidus, have been observed to use pheromones as a means of kin recognition to avoid inbreeding.[50] For example, B. bifarius males display "patrolling" behavior in which they mark specific paths outside their nests with pheromones and subsequently "patrol" these paths.[50] Unrelated reproductive females are attracted to the pheromones deposited by males on these paths, and males that encounter these females while patrolling can mate with them.[50] Other bees of the Bombus species are found to emit pheromones as precopulatory signals, such as Bombus lapidarius.[51]

Applications

[edit]

Pheromone trapping

[edit]

Pheromones of certain pest insect species, such as the Japanese beetle, acrobat ant, and the spongy moth, can be used to trap the respective insect for monitoring purposes, to control the population by creating confusion, to disrupt mating, and to prevent further egg laying.

Animal husbandry

[edit]

Pheromones are used in the detection of oestrus in sows. Boar pheromones are sprayed into the sty, and those sows that exhibit sexual arousal are known to be currently available for breeding.

Human sex pheromone controversies

[edit]

While humans are highly dependent upon visual cues, when in close proximity smells also play a role in sociosexual behaviors. An inherent difficulty in studying human pheromones is the need for cleanliness and odorlessness in human participants.[52] Though various researchers have investigated the possibility of their existence, no pheromonal substance has ever been demonstrated to directly influence human behavior in a peer reviewed study.[53][54][55][56] Experiments have focused on three classes of possible human pheromones: axillary steroids, vaginal aliphatic acids, and stimulators of the vomeronasal organ, including this 2018 study claiming pheromones affect men's sexual cognition.

Axillary steroids

[edit]

Axillary steroids are produced by the testes, ovaries, apocrine glands, and adrenal glands.[57] These chemicals are not biologically active until puberty when sex steroids influence their activity.[58] The change in activity during puberty suggest that humans may communicate through odors.[57] Several axillary steroids have been described as possible human pheromones: androstadienol, androstadienone, androstenol, androstenone, and androsterone.

  • Androstenol is the putative female pheromone.[58] In a 1978 study by Kirk-Smith, people wearing surgical masks treated with androstenol or untreated were shown pictures of people, animals and buildings and asked to rate the pictures on attractiveness.[59] Individuals with their masks treated with androstenol rated their photographs as being "warmer" and "more friendly".[59] The best-known case study involves the synchronization of menstrual cycles among women based on unconscious odor cues, the McClintock effect, named after the primary investigator, Martha McClintock, of the University of Chicago.[60][61] A group of women were exposed to a whiff of perspiration from other women. Depending on the time in the month the sweat was collected (before, during, or after ovulation) there was an association with the recipient woman's menstrual cycle to speed up or slow down. The 1971 study proposed two types of pheromone involved: "One, produced prior to ovulation, shortens the ovarian cycle; and the second, produced just at ovulation, lengthens the cycle". However, recent studies and reviews of the methodology have called the validity of her results and existence of menstrual synchronization into question.[62][63]
  • Androstenone is postulated to be secreted only by males as an attractant for women, and thought to be a positive effector for their mood. It seems to have different effects on women, depending on where a female is in her menstrual cycle, with the highest sensitivity to it during ovulation.[58] In 1983, study participants exposed to androstenone were shown to undergo changes in skin conductance.[64] Androstenone has been found to be perceived as more pleasant to women during their time of ovulation.[52]
  • Androstadienone seems to affect the limbic system and causes a positive reaction in women, improving mood.[57] Responses to androstadienone depend on the individual and the environment they are in.[65] Androstadienone negatively influences[how?] the perception of pain in women.[65] Women tend to react positively after androstadienone presentation, while men react more negatively. In an experiment by Hummer and McClintock, androstadienone or a control odor was put on the upper lips of fifty males and females and they were tested for four effects of the pheromone: 1) automatic attention towards positive and negative facial expressions, 2) the strength of cognitive and emotional information as distractors in a simple reaction time task, 3) relative attention to social and nonsocial stimuli (i.e. neutral faces), and 4) mood and attentiveness in the absence of social interaction. Those treated with androstadienone drew more attention to towards emotional facial expressions and emotional words but no increased attention to neutral faces. These data suggest that androstadienone may increase attention to emotional information causing the individual to feel more focused. It is thought that androstadienone modulates on how the mind attends and processes information.[65]

While it may be expected on evolutionary grounds that humans have pheromones, these three molecules have yet to be rigorously proven to act as such. Research in this field has suffered from small sample sizes, publication bias, false positives, and poor methodology.[66]

Vaginal aliphatic acids

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A class of aliphatic acids (volatile fatty acids as a kind of carboxylic acid) was found in female rhesus monkeys that produced six types in the vaginal fluids.[67] The combination of these acids is referred to as "copulins". One of the acids, acetic acid, was found in all of the sampled female's vaginal fluid.[67] Even in humans, one-third of women have all six types of copulins, which increase in quantity before ovulation.[67] Copulins are used to signal ovulation; however, as human ovulation is concealed it is thought that they may be used for reasons other than sexual communication.[57]

Stimulators of the vomeronasal organ

[edit]

The human vomeronasal organ has epithelia that may be able to serve as a chemical sensory organ; however, the genes that encode the VNO receptors are nonfunctional pseudogenes in humans.[52] Also, while there are sensory neurons in the human VNO there seem to be no connections between the VNO and the central nervous system. The associated olfactory bulb is present in the fetus, but regresses and vanishes in the adult brain. There have been some reports that the human VNO does function, but only responds to hormones in a "sex-specific manner". There also have been pheromone receptor genes found in olfactory mucosa.[52] There have been no experiments that compare people lacking the VNO, and people that have it. It is disputed on whether the chemicals are reaching the brain through the VNO or other tissues.[57]

In 2006, it was shown that a second mouse receptor sub-class is found in the olfactory epithelium. Called the trace amine-associated receptors (TAAR), some are activated by volatile amines found in mouse urine, including one putative mouse pheromone.[68] Orthologous receptors exist in humans providing, the authors propose, evidence for a mechanism of human pheromone detection.[69]

Although there are disputes about the mechanisms by which pheromones function, there is evidence that pheromones do affect humans.[70] Despite this evidence, it has not been conclusively shown that humans have functional pheromones. Those experiments suggesting that certain pheromones have a positive effect on humans are countered by others indicating they have no effect whatsoever.[57]

A possible theory being studied now is that these axillary odors are being used to provide information about the immune system. Milinski and colleagues found that the artificial odors that people chose are determined in part by their major histocompatibility complexes (MHC) combination.[71] Information about an individual's immune system could be used as a way of "sexual selection" so that the female could obtain good genes for her offspring.[52] Claus Wedekind and colleagues found that both men and women prefer the axillary odors of people whose MHC is different from their own.[72]

Some body spray advertisers claim that their products contain human sexual pheromones that act as an aphrodisiac. Despite these claims, no pheromonal substance has ever been demonstrated to directly influence human behavior in a peer reviewed study.[57][55][disputeddiscuss] Thus, the role of pheromones in human behavior remains speculative and controversial.[73]

See also

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References

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    Figure 2: Table of ligands, expression patterns, and species-specific behavioral responses for each TAAR
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Further reading

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