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Studies on feminine sexual behavior in the male rat: Influence of olfactory stimuli
Authors:Ch Schaeffer  Cl Aron
Institution:Institute of Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Louis Pasteur University, Strasbourg, France
Abstract:The aim of this study was to determine if the display of lordosis behavior in the male rat could be influenced by the olfactory environment. Unexperienced adult male rats were orchidectomized (ORCH). They were primed with 75 μg estradiol benzoate and 1 mg progesterone was injected at an interval of 39 hr following long-term (LT = 3 weeks) or short-term (SHT = 8 hr 30 min) exposure to the odor of male or female urine. For 10 min they were placed in the presence of a “stimulus” male of proven sexual vigor 9 hr 30 min ± 1 hr after progesterone injection. Both LT and SHT exposure to the odor of male urine caused a significant increase in the number of ORCH rats which showed lordosis response to male mounts compared to either the ORCH rats exposed to the odor of female urine or to the controls. Following complete olfactory bulb removal (COBR), no difference was observed in the occurrence of lordosis behavior between the ORCH rats whether or not exposed to the odor of urine. For the ORCH-COBR rats exposed to male urine the proportion of animals responding to mounts did not differ from that of their nonbulbectomized counterparts. In comparing the effects of COBR vs anterior olfactory bulb removal (AOBR) lordosis behavior occurred more frequently in COBR than in AOBR-ORCH rats. The lordosis quotient (LQ) was not affected by exposure to the odor of male urine in the nonbulbectomized ORCH rats. In contrast, it appeared to be higher in both COBR and AOBR animals than in their nonbulbectomized counterparts. The olfactory bulbs were then concluded to inhibit the display of lordosis behavior in the male rat. It was also thought that the olfactory stimuli originating from male urine were capable of releasing the hypothalamic structures involved in the control of lordosis behavior of the male rat from an olfactory inhibitory influence.
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