For years popular belief has held that the best way to catch a mouse is to entice it into a trap with a tasty chunk of cheese.

Millions of children have howled with laughter as they watched cartoon cat Tom try to ensnare arch-rival Jerry with a lump of cheddar.

But a new study has debunked the long-held theory that mice are attracted to the smell of cheese.

According to researchers from Manchester Metropolitan University and the Stilton Cheese Makers Association, mice actually prefer foods with a high sugar content.

As part of a wider study into what foods attract and repel animals, researchers found that a mouse's diet is prima-rily made up of grains and fruit - both foods high in sugar - and would turn their noses up at something as strong in smell and rich in taste as cheese.

Dr David Holmes, an animal behaviourist from Manchester Metropolitan University, said: "Clearly the supposition of mice liking cheese is a popular premise. Mice have evolved almost entirely without cheese or anything resembling it.

"Mice respond to the smell, texture and taste of food and cheese is something that would not be available to them in their natural environment and therefore not something that they would respond to."

Nigel White of the Stilton Cheese Makers Association said: "Blue Stilton cheese has a very distinctive aroma and has a huge fan base across the world but mice are clearly not among that."