Abstract
A series of 9 experiments was conducted to examine various characteristics of the urinary chemosignal found in the urine of oestrous female mice that accelerates the sexual development of conspecific females. This urinary chemosignal was effective in doses as small as 0.001 ml/day, was present in excreted and bladder urine, required 3 days of treatment starting before Day 29 of age to effect an acceleration of puberty, required a minimum daily exposure of 2 h, and was relatively nonvolatile. In addition the chemosignal from oestrous females was effective in summer but not in winter months, was significantly more effective when collected at the middle or end of the dark portion of the daily cycle than at the beginning of the dark phase or middle of the light phase, and was not affected by food deprivation or shortened photoperiod. Simultaneous treatment of test subjects with urine from oestrous females and grouped females resulted in delays of puberty and simultaneous treatment with urine from oestrous females and urine from males or pregnant or lactating females did not result in any enhanced acceleration of puberty.