homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Mice are terrified by something unexpected. It's bananas

Evolution sometimes leads to unexpected consequences.

Mihai Andrei
May 31, 2022 @ 11:13 am

share Share

Mice have a lot of things to be worried about. Predators are often nearby and threats are constantly looming, so you’d expect them to be less concerned about something like fruit. But as researchers found out, due to a chemical coincidence, bananas can also be unnerving to the little critters — at least the males.

Image credits: Nick Fewings.

Mice communicate more than you think, but much of that communication isn’t visual or auditory — it’s olfactive. Their very keen sense of smell enables them to use a number of chemical signaling mechanisms, but sometimes, this signaling can backfire.

“Mice have richer communication with one another than we think; it’s just that a lot of it’s through smell,” says Jeffrey Mogil, a Professor in the Department of Psychology at McGill University in Canada.

While they were studying something quite different, researchers at McGill noticed that male mice were acting weird when around pregnant females (which were studied in another experiment).

Male mice can be quite ruthless with babies. Some mice males, especially virgin males, are well-known to engage in aggression against offspring, often killing them to advance their own genetic fitness. So researchers wanted to explore what was triggering the unusual behavior in mice.

They found that the effect was caused by a chemical called n-pentyl acetate, also called amyl acetate. The female mice produce amyl acetate, likely to signal that they’re ready to fight aggressors away from their babies, and it’s making the male mice feel a bit weird. In particular, exposure to this substance produced a pain-relieving effect on the males, making them less sensitive to pain (which is something you’d want if you’re preparing for a fight).

“Although maternal attack does not always succeed in preventing male intruders from committing infanticide, any threat of violence is likely to produce stress in both parties, and maternal aggression has been shown to directly produce stress-induced analgesia in males measured after the attacks,” the researchers write in the study.

Curiously enough, amyl acetate is also an organic compound naturally produced by ripening fruit. It gives a strong banana odor that is used in the food industry to create banana flavors, attract bees, and generate pleasant perfumes. It’s also very similar to another chemical called isoamyl acetate, which also occurs naturally in bananas.

“Curiously, n-pentyl acetate is also responsible for the unique smell of bananas. After a quick trip to the supermarket for some banana oil, we were able to confirm that the smell of banana extract stressed the male mice just as much as the pregnant females,” says co-author Lucas Lima.

The levels of stress triggered in the male mice were higher in males that were unrelated to the pups, suggesting that these unrelated males are a bigger threat to the pups. It’s not surprising that mice send such complex signals through their sense of smell, but it’s rather unusual that females signal males in this way, the researchers note.

“There are a number of examples of male-to-female olfactory signaling in rodents, but far fewer examples of female-to-male signaling, especially outside of the realm of sexual behavior,” says Mogil.

In addition to finding a curious relationship between mice and bananas, the study could shed new light on interactions that affect mice in the lab. Sometimes, these interactions have an impact on mouse studies in ways that are not clear.

“The findings have important implications for improving the reliability and reproducibility of experiments involving mice. This is yet another example of a previously unknown factor in the lab environment that can affect the results of scientific studies,” says Jeffrey Mogil, a Professor in the Department of Psychology at McGill University and E. P. Taylor Chair in Pain Studies.

The study was published in Neuroscience.

share Share

Some people are just wired to like music more, study shows

Most people enjoy music to some extent. But while some get goosebumps from their favorite song, others don’t really feel that much. A part of that is based on our culture. But according to one study, about half of it is written in our genes. In one of the largest twin studies on musical pleasure […]

This Stinky Coastal Outpost Made Royal Dye For 500 Years

Archaeologists have uncovered a reeking, violet-stained factory where crushed sea snails once fueled the elite’s obsession with royal purple.

Researchers analyzed 10,000 studies and found cannabis could actually fight cancer

Scientists used AI to scan a huge number of papers and found cannabis gets a vote of confidence from science.

Scientists Found a Way to Turn Falling Rainwater Into Electricity

It looks like plumbing but acts like a battery.

AI Made Up a Science Term — Now It’s in 22 Papers

A mistranslated term and a scanning glitch birthed the bizarre phrase “vegetative electron microscopy”

Elon Musk could soon sell missile defense to the Pentagon like a Netflix subscription

In January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order declaring missile attacks the gravest threat to America. It was the official greenlight for one of the most ambitious military undertakings in recent history: the so-called “Golden Dome.” Now, just months later, Elon Musk’s SpaceX and two of its tech allies—Palantir and Anduril—have emerged as leading […]

She Can Smell Parkinson’s—Now Scientists Are Turning It Into a Skin Swab

A super-smeller's gift could lead to an early, non-invasive Parkinson's test.

This Caddisfly Discovered Microplastics in 1971—and We Just Noticed

Decades before microplastics made headlines, a caddisfly larva was already incorporating synthetic debris into its home.

Have scientists really found signs of alien life on K2-18b?

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. We're not quite there.

A Forgotten 200-Year-Old Book Bound in a Murderer’s Skin Was Just Found in a Museum Office

It's the ultimate true crime book.