Contents:
- GAY ANIMALS: ALTERNATE LIFTYL THE WILD
- MALE LN CGHT “MATG” WH MALE LN… GAY PRI? NOT QUE
- CAN ANIMALS BE GAY?
GAY ANIMALS: ALTERNATE LIFTYL THE WILD
(Image cred: © Chris Johnson – earthOCEAN)Homosexualy has been documented more than 450 speci of vertebrat signalg that sexual preference is blogilly termed animals. )Homosexualy has been documented almost 500 speci of animals, signalg that sexual preference is pretermed. They pulate equently, scream out light while dog so, and often engage homosexual activi.
About two thirds of the homosexual activi are amongst femal. Mal also take to homosexual play but tend to leave their partner soon after, makg what we ll the human world a one night stand.
In many s, homosexual activy is said to be more mon than heterosexual. (Image cred: © Chris Johnson – earthOCEAN)Homosexual activy occurs wh about the same equency as heterosexual play amongst the mare mammals.
MALE LN CGHT “MATG” WH MALE LN… GAY PRI? NOT QUE
Male bottlenose dolphs are generally bisexual, but they go through perds of beg exclively homosexual. The homosexual activi of the mammals clu oral sex durg which time one dolph stimulat the other wh s snout.
[See more pictur of dolphs]BisonHomosexual mountg between mal tends to be more mon than heterosexual female-male pulatn among Amerin bison, pecially bee femal only mate wh the bulls about once a year. Homosexual mountg enpass almost 9 percent of all sexual activi wh the hoofed mammals the wild. (Image cred: WWT)Homosexual upl acunt for up to 20 percent of all pairgs annually.
Almost a quarter of all fai are parented by homosexual upl that rema together for years. (Image cred: Geoff Shter)Splashg around the water is brought to a pletely new level gray whal, where homosexual teractns are que mon.
CAN ANIMALS BE GAY?
(Image cred: worldswildlifewonrs | Shutterstock)Mal of this stunng perchg bird light homosexualy. Almost 40 percent of the male populatn engag a form of homosexual activy and a small percentage don't ever pulate wh femal. However, scientific quiry to such behavrs didn’t happen until relatively recently due to historilly pervasive, negative attus towards homosexualy humans.
New work by evolutnary blogists suggts that perhaps, bld by historil homophobia, we have been askg the wrong qutn all along. In the past, was thought that female maqu engage homosexual relatnships this way only when suable mal are not prent. In other words, rearchers assumed that homosexual behavr only happens when animals are isolated om members of the oppose sex.
Intertgly enough, siar views once existed ncerng human homosexualy.