“Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted.” Albert Einstein

Thursday, September 16, 2010

For 9/20 Can Animals Be Gay? - NYTimes.com



Can Animals Be Gay? - NYTimes.com: Scientists have a heterosexual bias. consider these quotes from the NYT Magazine article:

"Speaking on Oahu a few years ago as first lady, Laura Bush praised Laysan albatross couples for making lifelong commitments to one another. Lindsay C. Young, a biologist who studies the Kaena Point colony, told me: “They were supposed to be icons of monogamy: one male and one female. But I wouldn’t assume that what you’re looking at is a male and a female.”

It turned out that many of the female-female pairs, at Kaena Point and at a colony that Young’s colleague studied on Kauai, had been together for 4, 8 or even 19 years — as far back as the biologists’ data went, in some cases. The female-female pairs had been incubating eggs together, rearing chicks and just generally passing under everybody’s nose for what you might call “straight” couples.

In recent years though, more biologists have been looking objectively at same-sex sexuality in animals — approaching it as real science. For Young, the existence of so many female-female albatross pairs disproved assumptions that she didn’t even realize she’d been making and, in the process, raised a chain of progressively more complicated questions.

After all, Fisher had also declared that “promiscuity, polygamy and polyandry are unknown in this species.” Lesbianism apparently never occurred to anyone — even enough to be cursorily dismissed. As Brenda Zaun recently told me, “It never dawned on anyone to sex the birds.”

She found that 39 of the 125 nests at Kaena Point since 2004 belonged to female-female pairs, including more than 20 nests in which she’d never noticed a supernormal clutch. It seemed that certain females were somehow finding opportunities to quickly copulate with males but incubating their eggs — and doing everything else an albatross does while at the colony — with other females.

Often, biologists are forced to assign sexes to animals by watching what they do when they mate. When one albatross or boar or cricket rears up and mounts a second, it would seem to be advertising the genders of both. Unless, of course, that’s not the situation at all. “There is still an overall presumption of heterosexuality,” the biologist Bruce Bagemihl told me. “Individuals, populations or species are considered to be entirely heterosexual until proven otherwise.” While this may sound like a reasonable starting point, Bagemihl calls it a “heterosexist bias” and has shown it to be a significant roadblock to understanding the diversity of what animals actually do.

5 comments:

  1. I believe that animals can be gay. Just like in the human world, we have gay couples that make up 30% of our population. It would not surprise me that animals can be gay also. Animals are also genetically encoded just as humans and can turn out to be gay.

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  2. To add to my comment above i also believe animals can be gay because not everyone is heterosexual. In the case of animals they also have a choice to be with who they want.

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  3. I really appreciate your comment. Why, until recently, have scientists been blind to same-sex coupling among animals.

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  4. I believe now that scentiest are looking at animals in less of a normal christen way and looking now as what the animals really are. Scentist are realizing that animals have many different qualities that no one knows about and now that this topic has been brought up its finally being explored.

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  5. I always believed being gay or lesbian was a choice someone made, and none of it had to do with genetics. By nature, and as mammals, we are meant to reproduce. Therefore I believe animals are not homosexual, but that some animals who live amoungst eachother find a same sex partner as a better "companion" to live with.

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