Human uses of chemoreception in other animals
- Related Topics:
- olfactory system
- pheromone
- smell
- taste
- repellent
Dogs
Humans often employ the ability of dogs to learn specific odors in order to locate odor sources. Thus, dogs can be trained to help find missing or suspect persons by the odor associated with the person’s clothing. Dogs can also be trained to locate drugs and are sometimes seen in this capacity sniffing at baggage as it is unloaded at airports.
Monitoring and controlling pests
The most widely used human applications of animal chemoreception involve attempts to control animals regarded as pests. For example, sex-attractant pheromones of many moths of economic importance have been used to monitor and control moth populations. For monitoring, a synthetically produced pheromone is exposed in a trap, to which male moths are attracted and from which they are unable to escape. The lure of the pheromone is so strong that individual moths may be attracted even when the population is very low. By monitoring changes in the numbers caught, which are presumed to reflect the size of the population, the buildup of damaging populations can be predicted and potentially prevented. Population control using sex-attractant pheromones usually employs a different approach that is dependent on confusing the males. The object is to saturate an area with so much synthetic pheromone that the males are unable to locate calling females. To achieve this, the pheromone is dispersed over the area in small capsules or fibers of plastic, often dropped by aircraft. The capsules are designed so that the pheromone is released very slowly and persists in the environment for some weeks before a new application is required. This method has been used with some success against the corn earworm (or cotton bollworm) in the United States.
Altering pest behavior
Chemicals are also used to inhibit feeding by various animals on crops or ornamental plants. Some fungicides and other compounds have been shown experimentally to inhibit feeding by deer and granivorous (feeding on grain or seed) birds, although it is not generally clear whether the effects are a consequence of distastefulness or olfactory repellence. A plant compound called azadirachtin has been widely used to inhibit feeding by herbivorous and granivorous insects. Azadirachtin is produced by the neem tree, which is native to northwestern India, although today it is widely grown in other parts of the world. The inhibitory effect of azadirachtin results from its taste. However, the efficacy of such methods is limited. For example, the compounds may be washed from foliage by rain, as plants grow, new growth is not protected; and, as an herbivore becomes increasingly hungry, it becomes less affected by the inhibitory effects. To overcome these obstacles, some compounds are injected into plants and some plants have been genetically engineered to produce deterrent substances (see genetically modified organism).
The use of chemicals to repel nuisance insects is widely used in various human societies. For example, in Ethiopia, leaves of the pepper tree, Schinus molle, are used to repel houseflies, and two compounds from the leaves have been shown to produce the repellent effects. Citronella extracted from plants is often used to repel mosquitoes. In some countries, certain synthetic compounds may be used. For example, in the United States many people periodically use the compound commercially known as DEET to repel biting arthropods, especially mosquitoes and ticks. The active ingredient is N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide, which is mixed with other compounds to produce appropriate patterns of release in different circumstances. While DEET generally is effective against insects, there is evidence that several species, including the mosquito Aedes aegypti, a carrier of yellow fever and other infectious viruses, and Rhodnius prolixus, a member of the assassin bug family that is known to transmit Chagas disease, can become insensitive to the chemical. A. aegypti was found to develop insensitivity within three hours of initial exposure, an effect correlated with a decline in olfactory receptor response to the chemical.
Elizabeth Bernays Reginald Chapman