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Same-sex animal love

Posted Wed, Jun 24, 2009
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Birds do it, bees do it, and apparently giraffes, dolphins and elephants do it too. The 'it' being engaging in homosexual behaviour.

A new study by California scientists and published in the journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution claims that same-sex coupling occurs in virtually all-existing animal species.

The idea of homosexuality among animals is controversial because it doesn't jibe with the biological imperative given same-sex couplings can't reproduce. But, in some cases, like that of Laysan albatrosses, if a male-female pair produces eggs and 'dad' dies or takes off, another female often steps in to help raise the chicks, increasing their chances of survival. In other cases, it seems like more of a time killer, as with male Bottlenose Dolphins that engage in sexual play with other males until the female is sexually mature and ready for action. Still others, like male fruit flies, are just too daft to distinguish males or females because they lack a gene that would help tell them apart.

Still, despite the evidence, researchers who support the existence of homosexuality among animals are often accused of having an agenda, using the presence of homosexuality in animals to justify it among humans.

But Canadian biologist Bruce Bagemihl, author of Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity emphasizes the opposite. 'It's too easy to say, because homosexuality occurs in animals, it must be natural in people,' he explains. 'Animals do many things we wouldn't consider acceptable behavior in people -- rape, incest and so on.'

And, as Bagemihl's research reveals, there may be an explanation for homosexual behaviour in one species, no general explanation applies. 'I think we need to re-examine why we're looking for an explanation in the first place,' he says. 'Maybe, for example, they're just having fun.'

Back on our farm growing up, it wasn't uncommon to see 'Bossy' mounting 'Flossie' out in the pasture. Was it because certain cows had secret homosexual yearnings or was it simply that there was no 'Bart the Bull' available to mess around with?

'The whole question of sexual pleasure is tough for zoologists to deal with,' adds Bagemihl. 'There is a continuum of sexual expression in the animal world that includes heterosexuality, homosexuality, bisexuality and everything in between. Why can't we see this behaviour as a natural variation in sexual expression?'

After all, hanging out in the jungle all day, catching bugs and swinging from vines has to get a little dull. I'd be looking for some sexual kicks too.

2 Comments

  • 1. Posted by yoohoomissbl... on Mon, Jul 06, 2009

    LOL .. Are you so desperate for a same sex lover that you are making a sales pitch?

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  • 2. Posted by xploring on Fri, Sep 25, 2009

    This is hardly the first time I have seen comments and studies about this. My question is why should we care. Is because animals do or don't do anything a reason for people to participate in that behavior. I really hope that we can strive to exceed base animal instict in our behavior. I am not stating my opinion one way or the other on homosexuality. Rather I am saying any discussion we have on the reasons for our actions should require that the minimum criteria on which we will base our decisions to act in a certain way is more involved than I saw a homosexual cow and thats good enough for me. Or alternately until you show me gay dolphins I won't believe homosexuality is OK. Common on people, lets have a little higher expectations for ourselves than this.

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