Promiscuous mice give birth to 'sexier smelling' sons, new research has suggested.
A study conducted by the University of Utah found female mice who competed socially for mates bore sons who produced more urinary pheromones, making them more attractive to female mice.
"Pheromones are the language of mice," Adam C. Nelson, the lead author of the study said. "When females mate in a socially competitive environment, they program their sons to have a head start by producing more pheromones."
The research, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences studied domestic mice who usually lived in paired cages and would therefore only mate with one partner. Researchers placed mice in mouse barns, which were divided by mesh in order to construct territories but allowed them to climb over the mesh to reach feeding stations, nesting places and drinking water.
They also made some of the territories more desirable than others, creating social competition.