Olfactory discrimination between litter mates by mothers and alien adult cats: lump or split?

2019 
Mother cats can discriminate between their own and alien kittens using kittensbody odour. Here we ask whether they can also distinguish between body odours of kittens from the same litter. We conducted three experiments using the habituation–dishabituation technique with the odour of 1- and 7-week-old kittens of both sexes. In Experiment 1, we found no evidence that mothers discriminated among their own kittens of either age when presented three times with the odour of one individual (habituation trials) and then with the odour of a different individual (dishabituation or discrimination trial), even when the donor kittens were of different sex. In Experiment 2, alien adults of both sexes distinguished between 7 but not between 1-week-old litter mates. In Experiment 3, mothers distinguished between unknown litter mates in a similar and age-dependent manner to the animals of Experiment 2. We conclude that litter mates possess individual odour signatures that can be discriminated by adult cats, that these cues take some time to develop, but are not discriminated by their own mother, at least not during the pre-weaning period. Mothers possibly perceive and respond to a learned “nest”/litter odour shared by all litter mates or categorize the individual odours of their kittens as belonging to an “own kitten” category. That mothers did not discriminate between the odours of their own kittens but did so between individual kittens of alien litters suggests that different levels of processing olfactory information exist in mothers’ ability to cognitively partition and differentially respond to such odours.
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