Violet gland Information & Violet gland Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
 Violet , African Violet , African
Violet, African Violet, African
spabodyworkmarket.com
 Submandibular Gland , Submandibular Gland Surgery, Submandibular Gland ...
Submandibular Gland, Submandibular Gland Surgery, Submandibular Gland...
londonentsurgeons.com
 Bartholin gland cyst - Chronic Bartholin gland cyst, bartholin cyst
Bartholin gland cyst - Chronic Bartholin gland cyst, bartholin cyst
diseasesatoz.com
 

The violet gland or supracaudal gland is an important gland located on the upper surface of the tail of certain mammals, including European badgers and canids such as foxes, wolves the domestic dog,[1][2] as well as the domestic cat.[3] It is used for intra species signalling, scent marking, and contributes to the strong odor of foxes in particular. Although it secretes a mixture of volatile terpenes similar to those produced by violets (hence the name), the chemicals are produced in much greater quantity than in flowers and the resulting strong smell can be quite unpleasant. Like many other mammalian secretion glands, the violet gland consists of modified sweat glands and sebaceous glands.

In the European badger, the secretions of the violet gland contain a high concentration of lipids, with a composition that varies seasonally. Researchers[who?] at the University of Oxford have identified 110 compounds produced by the violet gland using gas chromatography. It was found that specific compositions were shared among groups of badgers, while the secretions of individual badgers varied according to age, gender, health, and reproductive status.

In foxes, the violet gland is found on the upper surface of the tail, at roughly one-third of the tail's length from the body, and measures about 25 by 7.5 millimeters in red foxes. Due to its role in steroid hormone metabolism (and possibly production), foxes cannot be "de-scented" by removing this gland. For unknown reasons, the gland's secretions are fluorescent in ultraviolet light; this may result from the presence of carotenoids. In dogs, the violet or supracaudal gland is found approximately above the 9th caudal vertebra. The violet gland secretes protein and hydrophobic lipids, has wide excretory ducts, is connected with coarse hairs, devoid of cysts, and has no sexual dimorphism. In the dog and cat fancy it is often referred to as "stud tail", despite the fact that it appears in both genders.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Shabadash, S. A. (2004). "The Tail Gland of Canids". Biology Bulletin 31: 367. doi:10.1023/B:BIBU.0000036941.18383.bd. 
  2. ^ Deveaux, Renée Esther, Nachweis verscheidener druesentypen und mehrer hydroxysteroid-dehydrogenasen im dorsalen schwanzorgan (Supracaudal gland in dog & fox). D.V.M. thesis, Veterinary Medical Faculty, Bern University 1984[verification needed]
  3. ^ Shabadash SA, Zelikina TI (1997). "[The caudal gland in the cat is a hepatoid gland]" (in Russian). Izvestiia Akademii Nauk (5): 556–70. PMID 9410272. 

[edit] External links





Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots