Animals use pheromones because they need to find mates and they have to use their instincts to attract mates and keep away predators.
Why would you want to? It's natural. A lot of animals secrete pheromones.
Pheromones are very important chemical messages that animals use to communicate to each other. Generally, pheromones tell animals of the same species a) the state of reproductive readiness (Male elk for example can tell if a female is ready to mate by smelling her urine to see if there are certain pheromones present indicating that she is ready) or b) the emotional state of the animal (sometimes fish release fear pheromones into the water to warn other fish of a predator) Pheromones are typically inhaled by animals, and the brain determines what the pheromone means. Even humans can interpret what a pheromone means, even though we are not really aware that we are smelling a pheromone.
animals use many ways to attract each other such as pheromones wich are emmited by certain glands to color marking on their bodies.
Sweat glands secrete pheromones in humans. Pheromones are naturally secreted. A persons specific pheromones are often attractive to another person.
A pheromone is a secreted chemical that triggers a social response in another. There is mounting evidence that there is pheromone communication in all levels of animals, including humans.
Why would you want to? It's natural. A lot of animals secrete pheromones.
pheromones .
Phermones! because bugs and other animals use pheromones (kind of chemical) to attract different sex animals.
Pheromones are very important chemical messages that animals use to communicate to each other. Generally, pheromones tell animals of the same species a) the state of reproductive readiness (Male elk for example can tell if a female is ready to mate by smelling her urine to see if there are certain pheromones present indicating that she is ready) or b) the emotional state of the animal (sometimes fish release fear pheromones into the water to warn other fish of a predator) Pheromones are typically inhaled by animals, and the brain determines what the pheromone means. Even humans can interpret what a pheromone means, even though we are not really aware that we are smelling a pheromone.
Pheromones, mostly.
Pheromones.
they smell really bad all the time and so do humans so they can smell them
Pheromones. This is a smell given off by the animals. Related animals will give off similar smelling pheromones, thus preventing inbreeding. When leopard populations are isolated though, such as the Amur Leopard, they have no choice but to inbreed. When animals are isolated pheromones play less of a role over the pure instinct to procreate and survive.
Pheromones are chemicals that are emitted/secreted by animals that trigger a social response in other animals of the same species. This is why they are "social hormones"- hormones affect behavior, and pheromones cause different social behaviors. There are many different types of pheromones, such as alarm pheromones (e.g. aphids release it when attacked by a predator and it causes them to fly away), food trail pheromones (e.g. ants lay a trail from the nest to where the food is), and sex pheromones (e.g. males secrete it which arouses females around them), among others. In all of these cases, some kind of social behavior is triggered by the releasing of the pheromones.
Releasing pheromones is one of the ways animals and insects communicate with the other members of their species non-verbally. Pheromones influence the development or behavior of the other members of a similar species.
all animals have a different way of attracting a mate- some animals use a special call, or a display of bright colours of strength, or weird dance, or a display of affection such as licking etc. There is also a special scent that some females secrete when on heat, which attracts the male to them, and is the same sort of thing that males produce when marking their territory, called pheromones. xxxxx
pheromones