Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone

Abstract The ability to assess food quality is crucial to all organisms. Fleshy fruits are a major source of nutrients to various animals, and unlike most food sources, have evolved to be attractive and to be consumed by animals to promote seed dispersal. It has recently been established that fruit...

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Main Authors: Omer Nevo, Melissa H. Schmitt, Manfred Ayasse, Kim Valenta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-10-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6777
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spelling doaj-11811a5b724140699ccadf93b6593cf82021-04-02T19:24:16ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-10-011020113991140710.1002/ece3.6777Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent aloneOmer Nevo0Melissa H. Schmitt1Manfred Ayasse2Kim Valenta3Institute of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Genomics Ulm University Ulm GermanyDepartment of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology University of California Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA USAInstitute of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Genomics Ulm University Ulm GermanyDepartment of Anthropology University of Florida Gainesville FL USAAbstract The ability to assess food quality is crucial to all organisms. Fleshy fruits are a major source of nutrients to various animals, and unlike most food sources, have evolved to be attractive and to be consumed by animals to promote seed dispersal. It has recently been established that fruit scent—the bouquet of volatile chemicals emitted by ripe fruit—is an evolved communication system between plants and animals. Further, it has been argued that chemicals that are synthesized from sugar and its products may be an honest signal for sugar content and fruit quality. Elephants are important seed dispersers for numerous species and possess an olfactory system that is likely to outperform most other animals. We tested the hypothesis that fruit scent signifies sugar content and that elephants are capable of assessing fruit sugar levels based on scent alone. Using a paired‐choice test of marula fruits (Sclerocarya birrea) by semitame African elephants, we show that elephants are capable of identifying more sugar‐rich fruits based on scent alone and that this is likely based on two chemical compounds: ethanol and ethyl acetate, both downstream products of sugar fermentation. These results shed light on the mechanisms driving elephant feeding ecology, plant signaling, and the coevolutionary process between angiosperms and animal seed dispersers.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6777animal–plant interactionschemical communicationfrugivoryhonest signalingolfactionseed dispersal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omer Nevo
Melissa H. Schmitt
Manfred Ayasse
Kim Valenta
spellingShingle Omer Nevo
Melissa H. Schmitt
Manfred Ayasse
Kim Valenta
Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
Ecology and Evolution
animal–plant interactions
chemical communication
frugivory
honest signaling
olfaction
seed dispersal
author_facet Omer Nevo
Melissa H. Schmitt
Manfred Ayasse
Kim Valenta
author_sort Omer Nevo
title Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
title_short Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
title_full Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
title_fullStr Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
title_full_unstemmed Sweet tooth: Elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
title_sort sweet tooth: elephants detect fruit sugar levels based on scent alone
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract The ability to assess food quality is crucial to all organisms. Fleshy fruits are a major source of nutrients to various animals, and unlike most food sources, have evolved to be attractive and to be consumed by animals to promote seed dispersal. It has recently been established that fruit scent—the bouquet of volatile chemicals emitted by ripe fruit—is an evolved communication system between plants and animals. Further, it has been argued that chemicals that are synthesized from sugar and its products may be an honest signal for sugar content and fruit quality. Elephants are important seed dispersers for numerous species and possess an olfactory system that is likely to outperform most other animals. We tested the hypothesis that fruit scent signifies sugar content and that elephants are capable of assessing fruit sugar levels based on scent alone. Using a paired‐choice test of marula fruits (Sclerocarya birrea) by semitame African elephants, we show that elephants are capable of identifying more sugar‐rich fruits based on scent alone and that this is likely based on two chemical compounds: ethanol and ethyl acetate, both downstream products of sugar fermentation. These results shed light on the mechanisms driving elephant feeding ecology, plant signaling, and the coevolutionary process between angiosperms and animal seed dispersers.
topic animal–plant interactions
chemical communication
frugivory
honest signaling
olfaction
seed dispersal
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6777
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