Seed Media Group

The Homunculus

steveSteve Higgins is a psychology graduate student at an online university. He hopes that the three weeks and $29.95 that he is spending on his Ph.D. will get him a job at a Tier 1 research university. Do online universities have postdocs? Ok...just kidding, Steve is a real graduate student at a real school.


Glial Cells

Access Omni Brain mobile here.

Access Omni Brain email here.

Axons

Search This Blog

What the Brain is Reading


Recent Comments

Recent Posts

Archives

Blogroll

Bloggers' Rights at EFF


Channel N


Openlab 2007

OmniBrain is now Of Two Minds!

« Street Philosophy | Main | Unhealthy overweight people should pay more for health care »

Why do monkeys pee on themselves?

Category: AnimalsBiologyPsychology
Posted on: September 10, 2007 10:26 AM, by Steve Higgins

I know why I pee on myself (It usually involves wind or alcohol...or both) but I've always wondered why monkeys do it as well. Ok, I lie, I had no idea that monkeys (yeah yeah, I know it's a chimp but monkey is a more fun word) peed on themselves... well, besides this one.

According to News @ Nature, it's all about trying to get laid:

Miller and her team noticed a link between urine washing and attention-seeking.

Alpha males, for example, doubled their urine washing rates when being solicited by females. The researchers think this might be how males encourage females to continue paying attention once they've started.

And in 87% of fights or aggressive incidents, the loser of the battle washed in urine. The team suspects that this is also an attention-seeking behaviour--in this case seeking sympathy. But more research is needed to be sure.

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Comments

#1

Didn't anyone ever teach you to pee downwind?

Posted by: Chris | September 10, 2007 5:13 PM

#2

yeah... but I always forget b/c I'm stupid.

Posted by: Steve Higgins | September 10, 2007 6:19 PM

#3

I think the only thing that would make this news even better would be if it was uncovered thanks to a $1 billion grant from the federal government. No matter, I will sleep better tonight thanks to this knowledge. ;)

Posted by: patmcgraw | September 12, 2007 2:11 PM

#4

Attention Seeking? I'm thinking it has to do more with a type of advertisement. Which I guess is the same basic idea, but in this case the chimp is trying to have more females be able to smell him and the chemicals that are being secreted through his urine. Like a human male putting on cologne in order to smell better, in attempt to appear more appealing, the chimp is trying to produce a smell that indicates he is a suitable mate. Trying to show that he is healthy, that is if chimps have the ability to detect different levels of chemicals in the urine that would indicate such things, like a dog could.

Posted by: joltvolta | September 13, 2007 9:18 AM

#5

An equally interesting study would be what, exactly, the survival benefit is for loss of waste-disposal control in highly stressful situations.

Posted by: Julian | September 13, 2007 12:14 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Most Active

  1. John McCain is a flip-flopping opportunist 09.06.2008 · PZ Myers
  2. Origins conference 09.06.2008 · PZ Myers
  3. Football 09.04.2008 · Jonah Lehrer
  4. Fun With Creationist "Logic" 08.30.2008 · Ed Brayton
  5. You can't make this stuff up 09.05.2008 · Tim Lambert

Search All Blogs