Like some people, lemurs mix fragrances—in this case, their smelly secretions—to create richer, longer-lasting scents.
Male ring-tailed lemurs, our distant primate cousins, produce their distinctive musky odor with help from a pair of glands on their wrists that give off droplets of clear, fast-evaporating fluid, and a second pair of glands on their chests that secrete a smelly brown paste.
They use these scents to mark territories and tell rivals to back off.

Sometimes they deposit wrist secretions alone, rubbing their wrists directly onto branches and saplings. Other times they mix the two, pressing the insides of their wrists against their chest glands to mingle the scents. They also smear the pungent mixture on their tails, waving them in the air and wafting them at opponents to see who can outstink the other in a ritual called “stink-fighting.”
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Many animals combine odors from sources such as glands, urine, feces, and saliva, but why they sometimes blend and layer these fragrances, and other times deposit them alone, has not been well understood.
To find out why lemurs mix their scents, researchers from Duke University presented pure and mixed scent secretions from unfamiliar males to 12 ring-tailed lemurs at the Lemur Center in Durham, North Carolina. Their findings are published in the journal Royal Society Open Science.
The secretions were collected with cotton swabs and then rubbed onto three wooden rods—one rod with wrist secretions only, another with secretions from the chest, and a third with a mixture. Each male participated in two sets of trials, one set with fresh secretions and another in which the secretions were allowed to air out and evaporate for 12 hours first.
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The lemurs paid more attention to the mixtures, spending more time sniffing rods covered with mixed secretions than pure ones. Surprisingly, the lemurs showed an even stronger preference for mixed secretions after the scents had aired out, shifting from sniffing them when fresh to licking them intently when dried.
The results suggest that mixing scents serves two purposes. First, like blending perfumes with complementary notes, blending secretions may increase the amount of information conveyed by a single dab of scent, says lead author Christine Drea, professor of evolutionary anthropology. The wrist and chest secretions of male ring-tailed lemurs differ somewhat in composition.
Chemical analyses have identified dozens of odor molecules in the wrist secretions alone. Mixing wrist and chest secretions may also lock in the more fleeting aromas and boost their staying power, says co-first author and graduate student Lydia Greene.
The greasy goo from the chest glands contains a chemical called squalene, an oily substance produced by many plants and animals and commonly used as a preservative in perfumes and skincare products. The longer-lasting mixtures that result may send a signal to males from other groups, who may not wander by a scent-marked tree or sapling until days later.
Duke University and the National Science Foundation supported the work.
Source: Duke University