TL;DR: It was concluded that information about kinship in the beaver is coded in the AGS but not in the castoreum, the mechanism of phenotype matching is used in beaver sibling recognition, and the cue used in phenotype matching can be learned and used for recognition of related individuals by an unrelated individual.
TL;DR: For example, this article showed that beavers sniffed both castoreum and anal gland secretion from a stranger significantly longer than from a neighbour, and responded aggressively (stood on their hind feet, pawing and/or overmarking) significantly longer to castor fiber, but not to anal gland gland secretion, from a neighbor than from an intruder.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tested two competing hypotheses about the function of scent marking: scent fence and scent matching, and found that the scent-matching hypothesis predicts that the intensity of response should be the same or decrease because, without the presence of the intruding signaller coupled with the chemical signal, scent itself does not advertise the ownership of a territory.
TL;DR: Behavioral activity of single components of beaver castoreum was demonstrated for the first time and the response was strongest in the densest beaver population.
Abstract: Behavioral activity of single components of beaver castoreum was demonstrated for the first time. In four experiments samples were presented to free-ranging beaver in their family territories. First, responses to whole castoreum and anal gland secretion (AGS) from males and females were tested. Second, 24 compounds, known to be constituents of beaver castoreum, were individually screened for activity. Four of these consistently released immediate responses during the observation periods. These are the phenols 4-ethylphenol and 1,2-dihydroxybenzene and the ketones acetophenone and 3-hydroxyacetophenone. In the most complete responses, the beaver sniffed from the water, were attracted to the odor, swam toward its source, went on land, and then approached, sniffed, pawed, and scent-marked the artificial scent mound. 4-Ethoxyphenol, a compound not yet found in castoreum, also released these responses. Five additional compounds resulted in a few delayed visits to the samples during the night following the observations, as evidenced by destroyed scent mounds. These are 4-methyl-1,2-dihydroxybenzene, 4-methoxyacetophenone, 5-methoxysalicylic acid, salicylaldehyde, and 3-hydroxybenzoic acid. Third, mixtures of 24 and six compounds were tested. Responses to these mixtures could be as strong as those to whole castoreum. Fourth, the four regularly active compounds were tested in two additional beaver populations and proved to be active there, too. The response was strongest in the densest beaver population.