The flehmen response (/ˈfleɪmən/; from German flehmen, to bare the upper teeth, and
Upper Saxon Germanflemmen, to look
spiteful), also called the flehmen position, flehmen reaction, flehmen grimace, flehming, or flehmening, is a
behavior in which an animal curls back its upper lip exposing its front teeth, inhales with the nostrils usually closed, and then often holds this position for several seconds.[1] It may be performed over a sight or substance of particular interest to the animal, or may be performed with the neck stretched and the head held high in the air.
Flehmen is performed by a wide range of
mammals, including
ungulates and
felids.[1] The behavior facilitates the transfer of
pheromones and other scents into the
vomeronasal organ (VNO, or Jacobson's organ) located above the roof of the mouth via a duct which exits just behind the front teeth of the animal.
Etymology
The word originates from the German verb flehmen, to bare the upper teeth. It comes from the
Upper Saxon Germanflemmen, "to look
spiteful".[2] The word was introduced in 1930 by
Karl Max Schneider, director of the Leipzig zoo and an authority on big cats in captivity.[3][4]
This response is characterized by the animal curling back its top lip exposing the front teeth and gums, then inhaling and holding the posture for several seconds.[3] The behavior may be performed over particular locations, in which case the animal may also lick the site of interest, or may perform the flehmen with the neck stretched and head held high in the air for a more general
gustatory or taste-related investigation. The flehmen response often gives the appearance that the animal is looking spiteful, grimacing, smirking, disgusted, or laughing.
Mechanism
The flehmen response draws air into the
vomeronasal organ (VNO), an auxiliary
olfactorysense organ that is found in many
animals. This organ plays a role in the perception of certain scents and pheromones. The vomeronasal organ is named for its closeness to the
vomer and
nasal bones, and is particularly well developed in animals such as cats and horses. The VNO is found encompassed inside a bony or cartilaginous capsule which opens into the base of the
nasal cavity.[6] Animals that exhibit flehmen have
a papilla located behind the incisors and ducts which connect the oral cavity to the VNO, with horses being an exception. Horses exhibit flehmen but do not have an incisive duct communication between the nasal and oral cavity because they do not breathe through their mouths; instead, the VNOs connect to the nasal passages by the
nasopalatine duct.[7]
Chemical cues
The chemical cue obtained by an animal exhibiting the flehmen response is the presence of a non-volatile
organic compound. In contrast to
volatile organic compounds (VOCs), non-volatile organic compounds are those carbon compounds that do not participate in atmospheric photochemical reactions or evaporate under normal atmospheric conditions.[8] The VNO detects non-VOCs, which must have direct contact with the odor source. Sources of non-VOCs relevant to the flehmen response include pheromones and hormones excreted from the genital regions or urine of animals.
Function
An animal may perform the flehmen response when investigating sites of particular interest, or perhaps (more generally) odors or tastes.
Intra-species communication
The primary function of the flehmen response is intra-species communication. By transferring air containing pheromones and other scents to the
vomeronasal organ (VNO), an
olfactory-
chemosensoryorgan located between the roof of the mouth and the palate, animals can gather chemical "messages".[9] These scents tell an animal about other members of their species in some of the following ways:
Identifying reproductive status – male individuals commonly use the flehmen response as an olfactory mechanism for identifying the reproductive state of females of the same species based on
pheromones in the female's urine or genitals.[10] This is exhibited in the
reproductive behavior of sheep. The ram often exhibits flehmen after sniffing the ewes' external genital region, but this occurs most frequently on the day before
estrus when the ewes are sexually receptive.[11]
Reproductive synchrony – flehmen behavior also plays a role in
reproductive synchrony between females. In the
sable antelope, the frequency of flehmen changes seasonally, with the highest levels just prior to conception. Female antelopes associate closely with other females in the same reproductive state. Flehmen rates between females anticipated birth synchrony. Additionally, the level of synchrony was predicted by the frequency of female urine sampling during the previous year. Flehmen is a mechanism used by female sable antelopes to manipulate the timing of both conception and birth of offspring.[12] In the American bison, flehmen behavior in females has also been shown to stimulate the onset of
estrus and
copulation synchronization.[13]
Post-parturition – in horses, mares commonly show a peak in flehmen response during the first few hours after giving birth. Smelling the newborn foal and the amniotic fluids associated with birth often produces the reaction.[14]
Immature animals – in young horses, both colts (males) and fillies (females) exhibit flehmen behavior toward other
conspecifics with neither sex performing the behavior more than the other.[1] However, it has been reported that young colts flehmen up to five times more frequently than fillies, and fillies flehmen more frequently than mature mares.[14][contradictory] Young elephants also have a flehmen response to stimulants. The VNO of newborn elephants displays a structural maturity similar to adults, which supports the conclusion that flehmen at only six weeks of age is used to deliver chemical pheromones to a functional VNO.[15]
Inter-species communication
The flehmen response is not limited to intra-species communication. Goats have been tested for their flehmen response to urine from 20 different species, including several non-mammalian species. This study suggests there is a common element in the urine of all animals, an
interspecific pheromone, which elicits flehmen behavior. Specifically, chemical pheromone levels of a modified form of
androgen, a
sex hormone, were associated with the response in goats.[16]
Mammals exhibiting
A wide range of mammals exhibit flehmen including both predatory and non-predatory species.
The response is perhaps most easily observed in domestic cats and horses; both exhibit a strong flehmen response to odors.[17]Stallions usually smell the urine of mares in estrus whereas the male giraffe's flehmen response includes
tasting the female's urine.[18]Elephants perform a flehmen response but also transfer chemosensory stimuli to the vomeronasal opening in the roof of their mouths using the
prehensile structure, sometimes called a "finger", at the tips of their trunks.[citation needed]
^"flehmen". Dictionary.com. Retrieved May 28, 2013.
^
abHart, Benjamin L (1983). "Flehmen Behavior and Vomeronasal Organ Function". In Müller-Schwarze, Dietland; Silverstein, Robert M. (eds.). Chemical Signals in Vertebrates 3. Springer. p. 87.
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10.1007/978-1-4757-9652-0_5.
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^Briggs, Karen (December 11, 2013).
"Equine Sense of Smell". The Horse. Retrieved December 15, 2013.
^Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs): Technical Overview. United States Environmental Protection Agency.
http://www.epa.gov/iaq/voc2.html#2. Updated April 10, 2012. Accessed May 9, 2012.
^
abHart, Benjamin L.; Hart, Lynette A.; Maina, J. N. (1988-01-01). "Alteration in vomeronasal system anatomy in alcelaphine antelopes: Correlation with alteration in chemosensory investigation". Physiology & Behavior. 42 (2): 155–162.
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^Sasada, H.; Kanomata, K.; Fukuoka, T. "
Flehmen induction with goats by the urine of twenty animal species". 1988. 11th International Congress on Animal Reproduction and Artificial Insemination, University College Dublin, Irelend, June 26–30, 1988. Volume 4. Brief Communications.
Swaisgood, Ronald R.; Lindburg, Donald G.; Xiaoping Zhou; Owen, Megan A. (August 2000). "The effects of sex, reproductive condition and context on discrimination of conspecific odors by giant pandas". Anim. Behav. 60 (2): 227–237.
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