Chemical communication is when animals use smell to send messages to each other, like a secret language.
Imagine you and your friend both have a favorite snack, let's say it’s chocolate chip cookies. When one of you eats the cookie, the other can smell it and know that someone is happy or wants more cookies. That’s kind of how pheromones work! Pheromones are special smell messages some animals send out.
How It Works
Some bugs, like ants, use pheromones to tell others in their group where food is. When one ant finds a big piece of candy, it leaves behind a tiny trail of smell chemicals, like invisible footprints. The other ants sniff the air and follow the trail, just like you might follow your friend’s smell if they were eating cookies.
Why It Matters
These messages help animals work together, like a team! Bees use them to tell each other where flowers are, and some moths even find their mates using smell messages at night. Just like how you know when someone is excited by what they’re eating, animals can know what’s going on around them just by smelling the right message.
Examples
- Bees use pheromones to tell other bees where food is.
- Cats mark their territory with pee to say 'I was here.'
- Ants follow a trail of chemicals left by other ants.
Ask a question
See also
- Are humans the only species who drink milk as adults?
- Do animals exhibit handedness (paw-ness?) preference?
- How do migratory birds navigate thousands of miles accurately?
- What are foraging patterns?
- What are ants use tiny chemical messages?