“…The exploitation of odour cues emitted by food to increase forging efficiency has been studied mainly in the context of predator (Hughes et al, 2010) or invertebrate foragers (Beyaert & Hilker, 2014;Kaiser, Hughes, & Gibson, 1993), including blood sucking ectoparasites (Guerin et al, 2000), and there is mounting evidence that birds use olfaction to find food (Amo, Jansen, Dam, Dicke, & Visser, 2013;Mäntylä, Blande, & Klemola, 2014;Nevitt, Veit, & Kareiva, 1995). Recent studies have shown that a mammalian browser, the swamp wallaby (Wallabia bicolor), can exploit olfactory sensory cues from leaves to find and select food patches, and thus forage nonrandomly (Bedoya-Pérez, Isler, Banks, & McArthur, 2013;Finnerty, Stutz, Price, Banks, & McArthur, 2017;Stutz, Banks, Proschogo, & McArthur, 2016;Stutz, Croak, Banks, Proschogo, & McArthur, 2017). Apart from this, we know little about the olfactory cues used by mammalian herbivores to find food, despite the knowledge that olfaction is highly acute in many of these species (Donaldson & Stoddart, 1994;Miller et al, 2015;Provenza, Kimball, & Villalba, 2000) and that olfaction and taste functions are linked (Jakubas & Mason, 1991;Slotnick, Westbrook, & Darling, 1997), reinforcing the possibility that olfactory cues may be used to determine food quality.…”