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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2282/334

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Title: Subspecies discrimination in the Scandinavian beaver (Castor fiber): combining behavioral and chemical evidence
Authors: Rosell, Frank
Steifetten, Øyvind
Issue Date: 2004
Publishers version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z04-047
Abstract: Geographic isolation is one of several models that has been proposed to explain the evolutionary course of speciation. In this study, we examined how geographical isolation may affect subspecies discrimination in the free-ranging Scandinavian beaver (Castor fiber fiber L., 1758) by simulating a territorial intrusion by using scent (castoreum and anal gland secretion) from a con-subspecific (N = 8 for castoreum and N = 7 for anal gland secretion) and a hetero-subspecific (Castor fiber albicus Matschie, 1907; N = 2 for both castoreum and anal gland secretion). Direct observations of 33 families during evenings showed that beavers (i) sniffed castoreum but not anal gland secretion from C. f. fiber significantly longer than from C. f. albicus and (ii) responded aggressively (i.e., stood on the mound on their hind feet, pawing and (or) overmarking) significantly longer to castoreum but not anal gland secretion from C. f. fiber than from C. f. albicus. When experimental scent mounds were allowed to remain overnight, the response was significantly stronger to castoreum but not to anal gland secretion from C. f. fiber than from C. f. albicus. Gas chromatographic comparisons of castoreum and anal gland secretion from the two subspecies supported our behavioral observations for castoreum but not for anal gland secretion. These findings suggest that geographical isolation has developed discriminatory abilities in C. f. fiber. We further suggest that the proximate factors involved are of environmental origin.
Keywords: Beavers
Anal gland secretion
Scent marking
Castoreum
Publisher: National Research Council of Canada
Document type: Journal article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2282/334
Appears in Collections:Institutt for natur-, helse- og miljøvernfag

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