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Species Recognition by Chemical Cues in Neotropical Snakes

Copeia, 2012
Most snakes have the chemosensory ability to identify chemical cues from conspecifics, which is useful in many social and sexual behaviors. This has been especially well studied in European and North American snake species. In contrast, there is a general lack of knowledge on the biology and especially on the use of chemical signals by most Neotropical
Marianne Gabirot   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Presence of Chemical Cues Likely Alters Motivation, Rather than Perception of Weak Visual Cues

Integrative And Comparative Biology
Synopsis Animals encounter information simultaneously, combining input from multiple sensory systems before responding behaviorally. When cues in different sensory modalities interact, they may have direct impacts on sensory perception, allowing the animal to perceive stimuli that it would otherwise have missed, or the cues may instead ...
Georgie D Puffer   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Kin recognition in fish mediated by chemical cues

1992
There is an increasing number of studies which show that social organisms frequently have the ability to distinguish relatives from non-relatives, and determine their degree of relatedness (reviews: Holmes and Sherman, 1983; Blaustein and O’Hara, 1986; Fletcher and Michener, 1987; Waldman, 1988).
openaire   +1 more source

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