Evidence for signal coding for attributes such as age, sex or population of
origin, was sought in odour profiles derived from natural secretions of th
e preorbital gland of red deer Cervus elaphus (n = 26), sika deer C. nippon
(15), Chinese muntjac Muntiacus reevesi (23) and Chinese water deer Hydrop
otes inermis (53), from metatarsal secretions from red deer (n = 35), sika
(30), fallow (193) and roe deer Capreolus capreolus (26); and from roe deer
interdigital glands (n = 48). Volatiles were eluted from sample materials
at body temperature, to restrict analysis to those elements which would occ
ur within the natural odour profile; the different volatile elements were t
hen separated by gas chromatography. Initial results of these analyses were
strongly suggestive of some level of signal-coding for attributes of the s
ignaller. Few secretions (species x gland) contained many volatiles which d
iffered significantly between deer from different populations of origin and
, except in the muntjac preorbital and sika deer metatarsal secretions, sep
aration of populations was generally rather poor in formal discriminant fun
ction analyses (DFA). However, where no constraint is imposed on the number
of volatiles allowed to enter the analysis, secretions from at least one g
land accurately discriminated between the sexes in the original sample for
most species separation of sexes was only ineffective for Chinese water dee
r and fallow deer. Discrimination between deer of different age-classes was
similarly effective in the original sample for red deer preorbital and roe
deer metatarsal secretions and fair for preobital secretions of Chinese wa
ter deer; unbalanced age-structure of samples did not permit analysis for m
untjac or sika deer. Sometimes the actual predictive power of discriminatio
n was poor; it is notable that this was characteristically associated with
small sample sizes and the evidence indicates that scent secretions from mo
st species sampled here offer the potential for coding for at least the sex
and age of the signaller. Although chromatographic analysis of odours from
some glands reveals consistent differences between odour profiles characte
ristic of sex, age or population, this does not imply that the signal is de
liberately coding for such information, or that the deer use the informatio
n available. It is possible that differences in the composition of secretio
ns in relation to age or sex of the signaller, for example, is coincidental
or of secondary significance.