Homosexual behavior is common in nature, and it plays an important role in survival

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Miro

Sicc OG
Sep 20, 2006
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#1
July 10, 2008

Bisexual Species: Unorthodox Sex in the Animal Kingdom
Homosexual behavior is common in nature, and it plays an important role in survival
By Emily V. Driscoll


Two penguins native to Antarctica met one spring day in 1998 in a tank at the Central Park Zoo in midtown Manhattan. They perched atop stones and took turns diving in and out of the clear water below. They entwined necks, called to each other and mated. They then built a nest together to prepare for an egg. But no egg was forthcoming: Roy and Silo were both male.

Robert Gramzay, a keeper at the zoo, watched the chinstrap penguin pair roll a rock into their nest and sit on it, according to newspaper reports. Gramzay found an egg from another pair of penguins that was having difficulty hatching it and slipped it into Roy and Silo’s nest. Roy and Silo took turns warming the egg with their blubbery underbellies until, after 34 days, a female chick pecked her way into the world. Roy and Silo kept the gray, fuzzy chick warm and regurgitated food into her tiny black beak.

Like most animal species, penguins tend to pair with the opposite sex, for the obvious reason. But researchers are finding that same-sex couplings are surprisingly widespread in the animal kingdom. Roy and Silo belong to one of as many as 1,500 species of wild and captive animals that have been observed engaging in homosexual activity. Researchers have seen such same-sex goings-on in both male and female, old and young, and social and solitary creatures and on branches of the evolutionary tree ranging from insects to mammals.

Unlike most humans, however, individual animals generally cannot be classified as gay or straight: an animal that engages in a same-sex flirtation or partnership does not necessarily shun heterosexual encounters. Rather many species seem to have ingrained homosexual tendencies that are a regular part of their society. That is, there are probably no strictly gay critters, just bisexual ones. “Animals don’t do sexual identity. They just do sex,” says sociologist Eric Anderson of the University of Bath in England.

Nevertheless, the study of homosexual activity in diverse species may elucidate the evolutionary origins of such behavior. Researchers are now revealing, for example, that animals may engage in same-sex couplings to diffuse social tensions, to better protect their young or to maintain fecundity when opposite-sex partners are unavailable—or simply because it is fun. These observations suggest to some that bisexuality is a natural state among animals, perhaps Homo sapiens included, despite the sexual-orientation boundaries most people take for granted. “[In humans] the categories of gay and straight are socially constructed,” Anderson says.

What is more, homosexuality among some species, including penguins, appears to be far more common in captivity than in the wild. Captivity, scientists say, may bring out gay behaviors in part because of a scarcity of opposite-sex mates. In addition, an enclosed environment boosts an animal’s stress levels, leading to a greater urge to relieve the stress. Some of the same influences may encourage what some researchers call “situational homosexuality” in humans in same-sex settings such as prisons or sports teams.

rest of the article:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=bisexual-species&print=true
 
Feb 7, 2006
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#3
Does this article defend strict homosexuality in humans, or does it work to actually hurt the belief that humans or born gay, straight, or bisexual?
 
Nov 30, 2002
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#12
you have gays and straights.. if you like both.. youre gay.. nothing evolves differently.. the penguin was just trying to bust a nut so he stuck it in what he thought was a penguin pussy
 

ThaG

Sicc OG
Jun 30, 2005
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#13
Under 2000 species have been observed practicing homosexual activity, yet there are like what 10 million species on the planet? Seems societal factors have a lot to do with this.
If I were you, I would think before I post something like this

1. There aren't 10 million known species, 10 million is the estimated number of species. The number of described species is much lower, probably a little over a million. Nobody knows for sure because the last species census was done in 1949

2. Out of the million plus species we know, several hundred thousands are plants (which do not make sex, for obvious reason), fungi (same thing), bacteria, or species which are hermaphrodites, have more than two sexes, or don't have sexes at all

3. The fact that 2000 species are known to engage in homosexual activity, does not mean that the other n-2000, where n is the total number of animal species that have two distinct sexes have been observed not to do so. The vast majority simply haven't been studied.
 
Apr 8, 2005
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#15
one thing i dont see mentioned in this article. in many species, male on male sex is a way to show who the alpha male is. so its more not really the same thing
 
Apr 19, 2006
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#17
1. There aren't 10 million known species, 10 million is the estimated number of species. The number of described species is much lower, probably a little over a million. Nobody knows for sure because the last species census was done in 1949

We have never even seen the center of the earth, and we continue to discover new species every day. We inhabit a small percentage of the earth, and much is unexplored(contrary to popular thought). Putting any definites on such things is playing God.