Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 75 (1): 157-163, 2002
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Male degus, Octodon degus, modify their dustbathing behavior in response to
social familiarity of previous dustbathing marks
LUIS A. EBENSPERGER & ANDREA CAIOZZI
A previous experiment suggested that male degus, Octodon degus, use
dustbathing during intrasexual communication. Herein, we assessed whether dustbathing by male and female degus is influenced by
the social familiarity of previous marks. During 15-min tests, we contrasted the behavior of degus individually exposed during to an
arena containing loose, previously dustbathed sand by a same-sex and socially familiar individual with that of degus exposed to an
arena with soil previously dustbathed by a same-sex but socially unfamiliar conspecific. We measured the number of dustbathing
events per min, the latency to first dustbathing event, and the location of dustbathing events by depositor and responder individuals.
Both male and female degus dustbathe at a higher rate when subjected to soil previously used by a familiar conspecific than when
exposed to a substratum previously dustbathed by an unfamiliar degu. The latency to first dustbathing event by responder male or
female degus was unaffected by the social familiarity of previous marks left by depositors. Similarly, the place chosen by male and
female responders to conduct their dustbathing behavior was unrelated to the micro-location of previous marks left by a familiar or an
unfamiliar depositor degu. We conclude that degus are capable of discriminating socially familiar from unfamiliar scents of
conspecifics and deposited in the substratum during dustbathing. We discuss the implications of such ability in the context of degu
social behavior.
social familiarity,
sandbathing, scent marking, social communication