The "odorous house ant" smells like blue cheese or rotten coconut because it produces chemical compounds similar to those found in its nose-sakes. Cynthia Graber reports
ByA common response to seeing an ant inside your house is to stomp on it. But if you crush a member of the ant species Tapinoma sessile you might catch a whiff of a strange smell—a smell that reminds some people of rancid butter or rotten coconut. In fact, the smell is so noticeable that the insect’s common name is the “odorous house ant.” And many people call it the coconut ant.
In an effort to figure out why people have these reactions, researchers enlisted visitors at an event called the . One-hundred-forty-three volunteers smelled smushed ants and were asked to identify the scent from four choices: blue cheese, rancid butter, rotten coconut or just other.
The scientists then analyzed the chemicals responsible for the ant odor, as well as the smelly chemicals in blue cheese, fresh coconut and coconut buried underground for three days. It turns out that the chemistry of the ants’ scent is indeed similar to that of blue cheese and rotten coconut. But not to fresh coconut. And the researchers note that the microbes that turn coconut oil rancid are also involved in the production of blue cheese. The study is in the journal . [Clint A. Penick and Adrian A. Smith, ]
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