Smell helps primates escape parasites: study

Also plays a role in social cohesion by helping to soothe tension after conflict

April 08, 2017 08:30 pm | Updated 08:30 pm IST - London

VISAKHAPATNAM, 19/02/2014: A Mandrill, one of the new arrivals, from Israel Zoo at its enclosure in the Indira Gandhi Zoological Park in Visakhapatnam on Thursday, February 20, 2014. 
Photo: K.R. Deepak

VISAKHAPATNAM, 19/02/2014: A Mandrill, one of the new arrivals, from Israel Zoo at its enclosure in the Indira Gandhi Zoological Park in Visakhapatnam on Thursday, February 20, 2014. Photo: K.R. Deepak

Primates use their sense of smell to avoid contamination by intestinal parasites through contact with infected members of their group, a new study has found.

Frequent grooming among mandrills, a primate of the old world monkey family, is undoubtedly a means of eliminating ectoparasites. However, it also plays a major role in social cohesion — for instance, helping to soothe tensions after conflict, researchers said. Researchers from The French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) conducted an experiment using antiparasitics.

Behavioural experiments

They captured infected mandrills, administered the antiparasitic drug, and returned the treated mandrills to their group. Now free of parasites, these primates once again enjoyed frequent grooming. The team next sought to determine whether olfactory communication could explain avoidance of infected conspecifics or members of the group.

First, chemical analyses showed that fecal odours differed between infected and healthy mandrills. Next the team conducted behavioural experiments under controlled conditions on about 16 captive mandrills.

Researchers collected fecal matter from mandrills at different times — while parasitised and when free of parasites — and rubbed it onto bamboo shoots. These shoots were then presented to captive mandrills. Scientists noticed that the captive primates sniffed the bamboo set before them but actively avoided those shoots rubbed with infected faeces.

Researchers found that mandrills harbouring parasitic protozoans in their digestive tracts were less frequently groomed by their conspecifics than were healthy mandrills. Groomers especially avoided the perianal zone, which poses a high risk of contagion or disease spread by contact. Such selective shunning elegantly demonstrates how olfactory communication may play a role in the behavioural and social avoidance of parasitic infection, researchers said.

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