Animal sexual behaviour
This article is about the sexual behaviour of non-human animals.
monogamypolyandry
polygamy
promiscuity
sex apparently due to duress or coercion and situational sexual behaviour)
non-reproductively motivated
interspecific sexuality
sex with dead animals
homosexual sexual behaviour
bisexual
copulation
oestrus
competition
masturbate
use objects as tools
"mating system"
The four basic mating systems | ||
---|---|---|
Single female | Multiple females | |
Single male | Monogamy | Polygyny |
Multiple males | Polyandry | Polygynandry |
long-lasting pairs and cooperate in raising offspring.
These pairs may last for a lifetime, such as in pigeons,
or it may occasionally change from one mating season to another, such as in emperor penguins.
tournament species
sexual dimorphism
extra-pair partners. This includes previous examples, such as swans
extra-pair sexual activities lead to offspring.
Social monogamy refers to a male and female's social living arrangement (e.g., shared use of a territory, behaviour indicative of a social pair, and/or proximity between a male and female) without inferring any sexual interactions or reproductive patterns. In humans, social monogamy takes the form of monogamous marriage. Sexual monogamy is defined as an exclusive sexual relationship between a female and a male based on observations of sexual interactions. Finally, the term genetic monogamy is used when DNA analyses can confirm that a female-male pair reproduce exclusively with each other. A combination of terms indicates examples where levels of relationships coincide, e.g., sociosexual and sociogenetic monogamy describe corresponding social and sexual, and social and genetic monogamous relationships, respectively.[15]Social monogamy is relatively rare in the animal kingdom.
- Over 90% of avian species are socially monogamous.
- Only 3% of mammalian species are socially monogamous, although up to 15% of primate species are.
- Social monogamy has also been observed in reptiles, fish, and insects.
Sexual monogamy is also rare among animals
- While over 90% of birds are socially monogamous, "on average, 30% or more of the baby birds in any nest [are] sired by someone other than the resident male.
Patricia Adair Gowaty has estimated that, out of 180 different species of socially monogamous songbirds, only 10% are sexually monogamous.
Polygyny
Main article: Polygyny in nature
Polygyny occurs when one male gets exclusive mating rights with multiple females. In some species, notably those with harem-like structures, only one of a few males in a group of females will mate. Technically, polygyny
in sociobiology and zoology is defined as a system in which a male has a
relationship with more than one female, but the females are
predominantly bonded to a single male. Should the active male be driven
out, killed, or otherwise removed from the group, in a number of species
the new male will ensure that breeding resources are not wasted on
another male's young.[19] The new male may achieve this in many different ways, including:- competitive infanticide: in lions, hippopotamuses, and some monkeys, the new male will kill the offspring of the previous alpha male to cause their mothers to become receptive to his sexual advances since they are no longer nursing.
- harassment to miscarriage: amongst wild horses and baboons, the male will "systematically harass" pregnant females until they miscarry.
- Pheromone-based spontaneous abortion
- in some rodents such as mice, a new male with a different scent will cause females who are pregnant to spontaneously fail to implant recently fertilised eggs. This does not require contact; it is mediated by scent alone. It is known as the Bruce effect.
Polygynous mating structures are estimated to occur in up to 90% of mammal species.[22] As polygyny is the most common form of polygamy among vertebrates (including humans, to some extent), it has been studied far more extensively than polyandry or polygynandry.
Polyandry
Main article: Polyandry in nature
Polyandry occurs when one female gets exclusive mating rights with multiple males. In some species, such as redlip blennies, both polygyny and polyandry are observed.[23]The males in some deep sea anglerfishes are much smaller than the females. When they find a female they bite into her skin, releasing an enzyme that digests the skin of their mouth and her body and fusing the pair down to the blood-vessel level. The male then slowly atrophies, losing first his digestive organs, then his brain, heart, and eyes, ending as nothing more than a pair of gonads, which release sperm in response to hormones in the female's bloodstream indicating egg release. This extreme sexual dimorphism ensures that, when the female is ready to spawn, she has a mate immediately available.[24] A single anglerfish female can "mate" with many males in this manner.
Polygynandry
Main article: Polygynandry
Polygynandry
occurs when multiple males mate indiscriminately with multiple females.
The numbers of males and females need not be equal, and in vertebrate
species studied so far, there are usually fewer males. Two examples of
systems in primates are promiscuous mating chimpanzees and bonobos.
These species live in social groups consisting of several males and
several females. Each female copulates with many males, and vice versa.
In bonobos, the amount of promiscuity is particularly striking because
bonobos use sex to alleviate social conflict as well as to reproduce.
This mutual promiscuity is the approach most commonly used by spawning
animals, and is perhaps the "original fish mating system."[4]:161 Common examples are forage fish, such as herrings, which form huge mating shoals in shallow water. The water becomes milky with sperm and the bottom is draped with millions of fertilised eggs.[4]:161Polygamy
See also: Promiscuity § Other animals
The term polygamy
is an umbrella term used to refer generally to non-monogamous matings.
As such, polygamous relationships can be polygynous, polyandrous or
polygynandrous. In a small number of species, individuals can display
either polygamous or monogamous behaviour depending on environmental
conditions. An example is the social wasp Apoica flavissima.[citation needed]
In some species, polygyny and polyandry is displayed by both sexes in
the population. Polygamy in both sexes has been observed in red flour beetle (Tribolium castaneum).A tournament species is one in which "mating tends to be highly polygamous and involves high levels of male-male aggression and competition."[25] Tournament behaviour often correlates with high levels of sexual dimorphism, examples of species including chimpanzees and baboons. Most polygamous species present high levels of tournament behaviour, with a notable exception being bonobos.
Parental investment and reproductive success
Main article: Bateman's principle
In hermaphroditic animals, the costs of parental care can be evenly distributed between the sexes, e.g. earthworms. In some species of planarians, sexual behaviour takes the form of penis fencing. In this form of copulation, the individual that first penetrates the other with the penis, forces the other to be female, thus carrying the majority of the cost of reproduction.[28] Post mating, banana slugs will some times gnaw off their partners penis as an act of sperm competition.[29] In the grey slug, the sharing of cost leads to a spectacular display, where the mates suspend themselves high above the ground from a slime thread, ensuring none of them can refrain from taking on the cost of egg-bearer.[30]
Seasonality
Main article: Seasonal breeder
Mammals
Mating seasons are often associated with changes to herd or group structure, and behavioural changes, including territorialism amongst individuals. These may be annual (e.g. wolves), biannual (e.g. dogs) or more frequently (e.g. horses). During these periods, females of most mammalian species are more mentally and physically receptive to sexual advances, a period scientifically described as estrous but commonly described as being "in season" or "in heat". Sexual behaviour may occur outside estrus,[31] and such acts as do occur are not necessarily harmful.[32]Some mammals (e.g. domestic cats, rabbits and camilidae) are termed "induced ovulators". For these species, the female ovulates due to an external stimulus during, or just prior, to mating, rather than ovulating cyclically or spontaneously. Stimuli causing induced ovulation include the sexual behaviour of coitus, sperm and pheromones. Domestic cats have penile spines. Upon withdrawal of a cat's penis, the spines rake the walls of the female's vagina, which may cause ovulation.[33][34]
Amphibians
For many amphibians, an annual breeding cycle applies, typically regulated by ambient temperature, precipitation, availability of surface water and food supply. This breeding season is accentuated in temperate regions, in boreal climate the breeding season is typically concentrated to a few short days in the spring.Fish
Like many coral reef dwellers, the clownfish spawn around the time of the full moon in the wild. In a group of clownfish, there is a strict dominance hierarchy. The largest and most aggressive female is found at the top. Only two clownfish, a male and a female, in a group reproduce through external fertilisation. Clownfish are sequential hermaphrodites, meaning that they develop into males first, and when they mature, they become females. If the female clownfish is removed from the group, such as by death, one of the largest and most dominant males will become a female. The remaining males will move up a rank in the hierarchy.Motivation
Various neurohormones stimulate sexual wanting in animals. In general, studies have suggested that dopamine is involved in sexual incentive motivation, oxytocin and melanocortins in sexual attraction, and noradrenaline in sexual arousal.[35] Vasopressin is also involved in the sexual behaviour of some animals.[36]Neurohormones in the mating systems of voles
The mating system of prairie voles is monogamous; after mating, they form a lifelong bond. In contrast, montane voles have a polygamous mating style. When montane voles mate, they form no attachments and separate after copulation. Studies on the brains of these two species have found that it is two neurohormones and their respective receptors that are responsible for these differences in mating strategies. Male prairie voles release vasopressin after copulation prairie vole and attachment to the female then develops. Female prairie voles release oxytocin after reproducing and an attachment to her partner also develops. Neither male nor female montane voles have such a high quantity of oxytocin and vasopressin when they mate. Even when injected with these neurohormones, the mating system does not change. In contrast, if prairie voles are injected with the neurohormones, they may form a lifelong attachment, even if they have not mated. The reason for this is that prairie voles have more oxytocin and vasopressin receptors than do montane voles, and are therefore far more receptive to the two neurohormones. It is not the quantity of the hormone that determines the mating system and bond-formation, rather, it is number of neurohormone receptors.[36]Oxytocin and rat sexual behaviour
Mother rats experience a postparum estrus which makes them highly motivated to mate. However, they also have a strong motivation to protect their newly born pups. As a consequence, the mother rat solicits males to the nest but simultaneously becomes aggressive towards them to protect her young. If the mother rat is given injections of an oxytocin receptor antagonist, they no longer experience these maternal motivations.[37]Prolactin influences social bonding in rats.[37]
Oxytocin and primate sexual behaviour
Oxytocin plays a similar role in non-human primates as it does in humans.Grooming, sex, and cuddling frequencies correlate positively with levels of oxytocin. As the level of oxytocin increases so does sexual motivation. While oxytocin plays a major role in parent child relationships, it is also found to play a role in adult sexual relationships. Its secretion affects the nature of the relationship or if there will even be a relationship at all.[citation needed]
Studies have shown that oxytocin is higher in monkeys in lifelong monogamous relationships compared to monkeys which are single. Furthermore, the oxytocin levels of the couples correlate positively; when the oxytocin secretion of one increases the other one also increases. Higher levels of oxytocin are related to monkeys expressing more behaviours such as cuddling, grooming and sex, while lower levels of oxytocin reduce motivation for these activities.[citation needed]
Research on oxytocin's role in the animal brain suggests that it plays less of a role in behaviours of love and affection than previously believed. "When oxytocin was first discovered in 1909, it was thought mostly to influence a mother’s labour contractions and milk let-down. Then, in the 1990s, research with prairie voles found that giving them a dose of oxytocin resulted in the formation of a bond with their future mate (Azar, 40)." Oxytocin has since been treated by the media as the sole player in the "love and mating game" in mammals. This view, however, is proving to be false as, "most hormones don’t influence behaviour directly. Rather, they affect thinking and emotions in variable ways (Azar, 40)." There is much more involved in sexual behaviour in the mammalian animal than oxytocin and vasopressin can explain.[38][39][40][41][42][43][44]
Pleasure
It is often assumed that animals do not have sex for pleasure, or alternatively that humans, pigs (and perhaps dolphins and one or two species of primate) are the only species that do. This is sometimes stated as "animals mate only for reproduction". This view is considered a misconception by some scholars.[45][46] Jonathan Balcombe argues that the prevalence of non-reproductive sexual behaviour in certain species suggests that sexual stimulation is pleasurable. He also points to the presence of the clitoris in some female mammals, and evidence for female orgasm in primates.[47] On the other hand, it is impossible to know the subjective feelings of animals,[35] and the notion that non-human animals experience emotions similar to humans is a contentious subject.[48][49][50][51]A 2006 Danish Animal Ethics Council report,[52] which examined current knowledge of animal sexuality in the context of legal queries concerning sexual acts by humans, has the following comments, primarily related to domestically common animals:
Even though the evolution-related purpose of mating can be said to be reproduction, it is not actually the creating of offspring which originally causes them to mate. It is probable that they mate because they are motivated for the actual copulation, and because this is connected with a positive experience. It is therefore reasonable to assume that there is some form of pleasure or satisfaction connected with the act. This assumption is confirmed by the behaviour of males, who in the case of many species are prepared to work to get access to female animals, especially if the female animal is in oestrus, and males who for breeding purposes are used to having sperm collected become very eager, when the equipment they associate with the collection is taken out.[53]
There is nothing in female mammals' anatomy or physiology that contradicts that stimulation of the sexual organs and mating is able to be a positive experience. For instance, the clitoris acts in the same way as with women, and scientific studies have shown that the success of reproduction is improved by stimulation of clitoris on (among other species) cows and mares in connection with insemination, because it improves the transportation of the sperm due to contractions of the inner genitalia. This probably also concerns female animals of other animal species, and contractions in the inner genitals are seen e.g. also during orgasm for women. It is therefore reasonable to assume that sexual intercourse may be linked with a positive experience for female animals.[54]
Koinophilia
Main article: Koinophilia
Koinophilia is the love of the "normal" or phenotypically common (from the Greek, koinos, meaning "the usual" or "common").[55]
The term was introduced to scientific literature in 1990, and refers to
the tendency of animals seeking a mate to prefer that mate not to have
any unusual, peculiar or deviant features.[55] Similarly, animals preferentially choose mates with low fluctuating asymmetry. [56]
However, animal sexual ornaments can evolve through runaway selection,
which is driven by (usually female) selection for non-standard traits.[57]Interpretation bias
The field of study of sexuality in non-human species was a long-standing taboo.[58] In the past, researchers sometimes failed to observe, mis-categorising and mis-described sexual behaviour which did not meet their preconceptions. In earlier periods, bias tended to support what would now be described as conservative sexual mores. An example of overlooking behaviour relates to descriptions of giraffe mating:When nine out of ten pairings occur between males, "[e]very male that sniffed a female was reported as sex, while anal intercourse with orgasm between males was only [categorized as] 'revolving around' dominance, competition or greetings."[58]In the 21st century, liberal social or sexual views are often projected upon animal subjects of research. Popular discussions of bonobos are a frequently cited example. Current research frequently expresses views such as that of the Natural History Museum at the University of Oslo, which in 2006 held an exhibition on animal sexuality:
Many researchers have described homosexuality as something altogether different from sex. They must realise that animals can have sex with who they will, when they will and without consideration to a researcher's ethical principles.[58]Other animal activities may be misinterpreted due to the frequency and context in which animals perform the behaviour. For example, domestic ruminants display behaviours such as mounting and head-butting. This often occurs when the animals are establishing dominance relationships and are not necessarily sexually motivated. Careful analysis must be made to interpret what animal motivations are being expressed by those behaviours.[59]
Types of sexual behaviour
Reproductive sexual behaviour
Cuckoldry
See also: Cuckoldry in fish
Alternate male strategies which allow small males to engage in cuckoldry can develop in species such as fish where spawning is dominated by large and aggressive males. Cuckoldry is a variant of polyandry, and can occur with sneak spawners. A sneak spawner is a male that rushes in to join the spawning rush of a spawning pair.[60] A spawning rush occurs when a fish makes a burst of speed, usually on a near vertical incline, releasing gametes at the apex, followed by a rapid return to the lake or sea floor or fish aggregation.[61] Sneaking males do not take part in courtship. In salmon and trout, for example, jack males
are common. These are small silvery males that migrate upstream along
with the standard, large, hook-nosed males and that spawn by sneaking
into redds to release sperm simultaneously with a mated pair. This behaviour is an evolutionarily stable strategy for reproduction, because it is favoured by natural selection just like the "standard" strategy of large males.[62]Hermaphroditism
See also: Sequential hermaphroditism
Hermaphroditism
occurs when a given individual in a species possesses both male and
female reproductive organs, or can alternate between possessing first
one, and then the other. Hermaphroditism is common in invertebrates but
rare in vertebrates. It can be contrasted with gonochorism,
where each individual in a species is either male or female, and
remains that way throughout their lives. Most fish are gonochorists, but
hermaphroditism is known to occur in 14 families of teleost fishes.[63]Usually hermaphrodites are sequential, meaning they can switch sex, usually from female to male (protogyny). This can happen if a dominant male is removed from a group of females. The largest female in the harem can switch sex over a few days and replace the dominant male.[63] This is found amongst coral reef fishes such as groupers, parrotfishes and wrasses. It is less common for a male to switch to a female (protandry).[4]:162 As an example, most wrasses are protogynous hermaphrodites within a haremic mating system.[64][65] Hermaphroditism allows for complex mating systems. Wrasses exhibit three different mating systems: polygynous, lek-like, and promiscuous mating systems.[66]
Sexual cannibalism
Main article: Sexual cannibalism
Sexual coercion
Main article: Sexual coercion
Some species of birds appear to combine sexual intercourse with apparent violent assault; these include ducks,[69][70] and geese.[citation needed] Female white-fronted bee-eaters are subjected to forced copulations. When females emerge from their nest burrows, males sometimes force them to the ground and mate with them. Such forced copulations are made preferentially on females who are laying and who may therefore lay eggs fertilised by the male.[71]
In the Acilius genus of water beetles, an "evolutionary arms race" between the two sexes means that there is no courtship system for these beetles. Their mating behaviours include males holding females underwater till exhausted, and allowing only occasional access to the surface to breathe for up to six hours (to prevent them breeding with other males), and females which have a variety of body shapings (to prevent males from gaining a grip).[72]
It has been reported that young male elephants in South Africa sexually coerced and killed rhinoceroses.[73] This interpretation of the elephants' behaviour was disputed by one of the original study's authors, who said there was "nothing sexual about these attacks".[74]
Parthenogenesis
Parthenogenesis is a form of asexual reproduction in which growth and development of embryos occur without fertilisation. Technically, parthenogenesis it is not a behaviour, however, sexual behaviours may be involved.Whip-tailed lizard females have the ability to reproduce through parthenogenesis and as such males are rare and sexual breeding non-standard. Females engage in "pseudocopulation"[75] to stimulate ovulation, with their behaviour following their hormonal cycles; during low levels of oestrogen, these (female) lizards engage in "masculine" sexual roles. Those animals with currently high oestrogen levels assume "feminine" sexual roles. Lizards that perform the courtship ritual have greater fecundity than those kept in isolation due to an increase in hormones triggered by the sexual behaviours. So, even though asexual whiptail lizards populations lack males, sexual stimuli still increase reproductive success. From an evolutionary standpoint these females are passing their full genetic code to all of their offspring rather than the 50% of genes that would be passed in sexual reproduction.[citation needed]
It is rare to find true parthenogenesis in fishes, where females produce female offspring with no input from males. All-female species include the Texas silverside, Menidia clarkhubbsi[76] as well as a complex of Mexican mollies.[4]:162
Parthenogenesis has been recorded in 70 vertebrate species[77] including hammerhead sharks,[78] blacktip sharks,[79] amphibians[80][81] and crayfish.[82][83]
Unisexuality
Unisexuality occurs when a species is all-male or all-female. Unisexuality occurs in some fish species, and can take complex forms. Squalius alburnoides, a minnow found in several river basins in Portugal and Spain, appears to be an all-male species. The existence of this species illustrates the potential complexity of mating systems in fish. The species originated as a hybrid between two species, and is diploid, but not hermaphroditic. It can have triploid and tetraploid forms, including all-female forms that reproduce mainly through hybridogenesis.[84]Others
- Interbreeding: Hybrid offspring can result from the mating of two organisms of distinct but closely related parent species, although the resulting offspring is not always fertile. According to Alfred Kinsey, genetic studies on wild animal populations have shown a "large number" of inter-species hybrids.[85]
- Prostitution: There are reports that animals occasionally engage in prostitution. A small number of pair-bonded females within a group of penguins took nesting material (stones) after copulating with a non-partner male. The researcher stated "I was watching opportunistically, so I can't give an exact figure of how common it really is."[86] It has been reported that "bartering of meat for sex ... forms part of the social fabric of a troop of wild chimps living in the Tai National Park in the Cote d'Ivoire."[87]
- Pavlovian conditioning: The sexualisation of objects or locations is recognised in the animal breeding world. For example, male animals may become sexually aroused upon visiting a location where they have been allowed to have sex before, or upon seeing a stimulus previously associated with sexual activity such as an artificial vagina.[53] Sexual preferences for certain cues can be artificially induced in rats by pairing scents or objects with their early sexual experiences.[88] The primary motivation of this behaviour is Pavlovian conditioning, and the association is due to a conditioned response (or association) formed with a distinctive "reward".[88]
- Viewing images: A study using four adult male rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) showed that male rhesus macaques will give up a highly valued item, juice, to see images of the faces or perineum of high-status females.[89] Encouraging captive pandas to mate is problematic. Showing young male pandas "panda pornography" is credited with a recent population boom among pandas in captivity in China. One researcher attributed the success to the sounds on the recordings.[90]
- Copulatory wounding and Traumatic Insemination: Injury to a partner’s genital tract during mating occurs in at least 40 taxa, ranging from fruit flies to humans. However, it often goes unnoticed due to its cryptic nature and because of internal wounds not visible outside.[91]
Non-reproductive sexual behaviour
Main article: Non-reproductive sexual behaviour in animals
There is a range of behaviours that animals perform which appear to
be sexually motivated but which can not result in reproduction. These
include:- Masturbation: Some species, both male and female, masturbate, both when partners are available and otherwise.[92][93]
- Oral sex: Several species engage in both autofellatio and oral sex. This has been documented in brown bears,[94] Tibetan macaques,[95] wolves,[96] goats, primates, hyenas,[97] bats,[98] cape ground squirrels[99] and sheep. In the greater short-nosed fruit bat, copulation by males is dorsoventral and the females lick the shaft or the base of the male's penis, but not the glans which has already penetrated the vagina. While the females do this, the penis is not withdrawn and research has shown a positive relationship between length of the time that the penis is licked and the duration of copulation. Post copulation genital grooming has also been observed.[100]
- Homosexuality: Same-sex sexual behaviour occurs in a range of species, especially in social species, particularly in marine birds and mammals, monkeys, and the great apes. As of 1999, the scientific literature contained reports of homosexual behaviour in at least 471 wild species.[101] Organisers of the Against Nature? exhibit stated that "homosexuality has been observed among 1,500 species, and that in 500 of those it is well documented."[102]
- Genital-genital rubbing: This is sexual activity in which one animal rubs his or her genitals against the genitals of another animal. This is stated to be the "bonobo's most typical sexual pattern, undocumented in any other primate".[104][105]
- Inter-species mating: Some animals opportunistically mate with individuals of another species.[106]
- Sex involving juveniles: Male stoats (Mustela erminea) will sometimes mate with infant females of their species.[107] This is a natural part of their reproductive biology – they have a delayed gestation period, so these females give birth the following year when they are fully grown. Juvenile male chimpanzees have been recorded mounting and copulating with immature chimps. Infants in bonobo societies are often involved in sexual behaviour.[108]
- Necrophilia: This describes when an animal engages in a sexual act with a dead animal. It has been observed in mammals, birds, reptiles and frogs.[109]
- Bisexuality: This describes when an animal shows sexual behaviour towards both males and females.
- Extended female sexuality: This is when females mate with males outside of their conceptive period.[110]
Seahorse
Seahorses, once considered to be monogamous species with pairs mating for life, were described in a 2007 study as "promiscuous, flighty, and more than a little bit gay".[111] Scientists at 15 aquaria studied 90 seahorses of three species. Of 3,168 sexual encounters, 37% were same-sex acts. Flirting was common (up to 25 potential partners a day of both sexes); only one species (the British spiny seahorse) included faithful representatives, and for these 5 of 17 were faithful, 12 were not. Bisexual behaviour was widespread and considered "both a great surprise and a shock", with big-bellied seahorses of both sexes not showing partner preference. 1,986 contacts were male-female, 836 were female-female and 346 were male-male.[111]Bonobo
Dolphin
Male bottlenose dolphins have been observed working in pairs to follow or restrict the movement of a female for weeks at a time, waiting for her to become sexually receptive. The same pairs have also been observed engaging in intense sexual play with each other. Janet Mann, a professor of biology and psychology at Georgetown University, argues[114] that the common same-sex behaviour among male dolphin calves is about bond formation and benefits the species evolutionarily. They cite studies that have shown the dolphins later in life are bisexual and the male bonds forged from homosexuality work for protection as well as locating females with which to reproduce. In 1991, an English man was prosecuted for allegedly having sexual contact with a dolphin.[115] The man was found not guilty after it was revealed at trial that the dolphin was known to tow bathers through the water by hooking his penis around them.[115]Hyena
The female spotted hyena has a unique urinary-genital system, closely resembling the penis of the male, called a pseudo-penis. The family structure is matriarchal and dominance relationships with strong sexual elements are routinely observed between related females. They are notable for using visible sexual arousal as a sign of submission but not dominance in males as well as females (females have a sizable erectile clitoris).[116] It is speculated that to facilitate this, their sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems may be partially reversed in respect to their reproductive organs.[117]Mating behaviour
See also: Mating call
Vertebrates
Mammals
Further information: Mammalian reproduction and Social monogamy in mammalian species
Mammals mate by vaginal copulation. To achieve this, the male usually mounts the female from behind.[118] The female may exhibit lordosis
in which she arches her back ventrally to facilitate entry of the
penis. Amongst the land mammals, other than humans, only bonobos mate in
a face-to-face position,[119][better source needed] although ventro-ventral copulation has also been observed in Rhabdomys.[120] Some sea mammals copulate in a belly-to-belly position.[121][122] Some camelids mate in a lying-down position.[123] In most mammals ejaculation occurs after multiple intromissions,[124] but in most ruminant species, a single pelvic thrust occurs during copulation.[125][126]Invertebrates
See also: Mating of gastropods
Penis fencing is a mating behaviour engaged in by certain species of flatworm, such as Pseudobiceros bedfordi. Species which engage in the practice are hermaphroditic, possessing both eggs and sperm-producing testes.[130] The species "fence" using two-headed dagger-like penises which are pointed, and white in colour. One organism inseminates the other. The sperm is absorbed through pores in the skin, causing fertilisation.
Corals can be both gonochoristic (unisexual) and hermaphroditic, each of which can reproduce sexually and asexually. Reproduction also allows corals to settle new areas. Corals predominantly reproduce sexually. 25% of hermatypic corals (stony corals) form single sex (gonochoristic) colonies, while the rest are hermaphroditic.[131] About 75% of all hermatypic corals "broadcast spawn" by releasing gametes – eggs and sperm – into the water to spread offspring. The gametes fuse during fertilisation to form a microscopic larva called a planula, typically pink and elliptical in shape.[132] Synchronous spawning is very typical on the coral reef and often, even when multiple species are present, all corals spawn on the same night. This synchrony is essential so that male and female gametes can meet. Corals must rely on environmental cues, varying from species to species, to determine the proper time to release gametes into the water. The cues involve lunar changes, sunset time, and possibly chemical signalling.[131] Synchronous spawning may form hybrids and is perhaps involved in coral speciation.[133]
Butterflies spend much time searching for mates. When the male spots a mate, he will fly closer and release pheromones. He then performs a special courtship dance to attract the female. If the female appreciates the dancing she may join him. Then they join their bodies together end to end at their abdomens. Here, the male passes the sperm to the female's egg-laying tube, which will soon be fertilised by the sperm.[134] The male often dies shortly after mating.
Many animals make plugs of mucus to seal the female's orifice after mating. Normally such plugs are secreted by the male, to block subsequent partners. In spiders the female can assist the process.[135] Spider sex is unusual in that males transfer their sperm to the female on small limbs called pedipalps. They use these to pick their sperm up from their genitals and insert it into the female's sexual orifice, rather than copulating directly.[135] On the 14 occasions a sexual plug was made, the female produced it without assistance from the male. On ten of these occasions the male's pedipalps then seemed to get stuck while he was transferring the sperm (which is rarely the case in other species of spider), and he had great difficulty freeing himself. In two of those ten instances, he was eaten as a result.[135]
Genetic evidence of interspecies sexual activity
Main article: Humanzee
Research into human evolution confirms that, in some cases, interspecies sexual activity may have been responsible for the evolution of new species (speciation). Analysis of animal genes found evidence that after humans had diverged from other apes, interspecies mating nonetheless occurred regularly enough to change certain genes in the new gene pool.[136] Researchers found that the X chromosomes of humans and chimps may have diverged
around 1.2 million years after the other chromosomes. One possible
explanation is that modern humans emerged from a hybrid of human and
chimp populations.[137]
A 2012 study questioned this explanation, concluding that "there is no
strong reason to involve complicated factors in explaining the autosomal
data".[138]Inbreeding avoidance
Main article: Inbreeding avoidance
When close relatives mate, progeny may exhibit the detrimental effects of inbreeding depression. Inbreeding depression is predominantly caused by the homozygous expression of recessive deleterious alleles.[139] Over time, inbreeding depression may lead to the evolution of inbreeding avoidance
behaviour. Several examples of animal behaviour that reduce mating of
close relatives and inbreeding depression are described next.Reproductively active female naked mole-rats tend to associate with unfamiliar males (usually non-kin), whereas reproductively inactive females do not discriminate.[140] The preference of reproductively active females for unfamiliar males is interpreted as an adaptation for avoiding inbreeding.
When mice inbreed with close relatives in their natural habitat, there is a significant detrimental effect on progeny survival.[141] In the house mouse, the major urinary protein (MUP) gene cluster provides a highly polymorphic scent signal of genetic identity that appears to underlie kin recognition and inbreeding avoidance. Thus there are fewer matings between mice sharing MUP haplotypes than would be expected if there were random mating.[142]
Meerkat females appear to be able to discriminate the odour of their kin from the odour of their non-kin.[143] Kin recognition is a useful ability that facilitates both cooperation among relatives and the avoidance of inbreeding. When mating does occur between meerkat relatives, it often results in inbreeding depression. Inbreeding depression was evident for a variety of traits: pup mass at emergence from the natal burrow, hind-foot length, growth until independence and juvenile survival.[144]
The grey-sided vole (Myodes rufocanus) exhibits male-biased dispersal as a means of avoiding incestuous matings.[145] Among those matings that do involve inbreeding the number of weaned juveniles in litters is significantly smaller than that from non-inbred litters indicating inbreeding depression.
In natural populations of the bird Parus major (great tit), inbreeding is likely avoided by dispersal of individuals from their birthplace, which reduces the chance of mating with a close relative.[146]
Toads display breeding site fidelity, as do many amphibians. Individuals that return to natal ponds to breed will likely encounter siblings as potential mates. Although incest is possible, Bufo americanus siblings rarely mate. These toads likely recognise and actively avoid close kins as mates. Advertisement vocalisations by males appear to serve as cues by which females recognise their kin.[147]
See also
- Pre-copulatory isolation mechanisms in animals
- Biology and sexual orientation
- Green Porno, a series of short films about animal mating, enacted by humans, airing on the Sundance Channel
- List of animals displaying homosexual behaviour
- r/K selection theory
- Polygamy in house mouse
- Sexual behaviour of dogs
- Sexual behaviour of horses
La sexualité animale est diverse et dépend des espèces. Certaines pratiques peuvent être rapprochées de pratiques humaines.
Sommaire
Une définition complexe
La notion de sexualité chez les animaux diffère de celle qu'on applique généralement aux humains. Ainsi, le Trésor de la Langue Française définit ainsi la « sexualité » chez les animaux :« Ensemble des mécanismes physiologiques qui concourent au rapprochement des sexes et à la reproduction de l'espèce1. »Alors que chez l'être humain cela désigne :
« Ensemble des tendances et des activités qui, à travers le rapprochement des corps, l'union des sexes (généralement accompagnés d'un échange psycho-affectif), recherchent le plaisir charnel, l'accomplissement global de la personnalité1. »Cette notion, très psychologique, est donc difficile à appliquer telle quelle aux animaux, et la sexualité se cantonne donc le plus souvent dans le règne animal à la somme des comportements sexuels observables, sans dimension psychologique ou ontologique. Il en va de même de la sexualité prise au sens d'« orientation sexuelle »2, qui est une définition éminemment subjective et existentialiste, notamment dans sa dimension exclusive : par exemple, si on observe des comportements homosexuels chez de nombreux vertébrés, l'« homosexualité » au sens d'attirance sexuelle exclusivement tournée vers des individus de même sexe n'a jamais été observé dans la nature[réf. nécessaire].
Rites nuptiaux
De nombreux animaux ont des rituels de parade nuptiale ayant surtout pour fonction de démontrer la capacité des partenaires à engendrer une progéniture saine et robuste et/ou à s'en occuper convenablement.Ainsi, chez les macaques à longue queue (Macaca fascicularis), le mâle approche la femelle en commençant par l'épouiller et lui nettoyer le pelage. Selon une étude publiée en décembre 2007 dans la revue Animal Behavior, réalisée entre 2003 et 2005 par Michael Gumert, un spécialiste du comportement animal de l'université technologique Nanyang de Singapour, portant sur cinquante groupes de macaques à longue queue et 243 séances d'épouillage et réalisée dans le Parc national de Tanjung Puting à Kalimantan Tengah en Indonésie, on a constaté une augmentation de l'activité sexuelle après un épouillage, le nombre de rapports sexuels des femelles passant de 1,5 par heure en temps normal à 3,5. La durée du soin peut aller de quelques secondes à une demi-heure voire plus, et elle augmente si le mâle a un statut inférieur ou si le nombre de femelles est restreint3.
Chez les manchots Adélie, les femelles chapardent à leurs partenaires des galets qu'elles utilisent pour améliorer le confort de leur nid4.
Les dons nuptiaux, accordés par les mâles aux femelles et visant à enrichir les apports nutritionnels de ces dernières, sont fréquents chez les insectes et les araignées5,6,7.
Critères définissant la culture chez l'animal
Article connexe : culture (éthologie).
La culture est un ensemble de savoirs
et de pratiques (règles sociales, utilisation d'outils, apprentissages
sociaux…) qui, au sein d'un groupe donné, se partagent et se transmettent socialement et non par héritage génétique.« L'exemple le plus célèbre de culture animale est le lavage de patates douces chez le macaque japonais. »
« Si une pareille variante comportementale se généralise au sein du groupe, si elle se transmet par tradition d'une génération à l'autre et si le groupe se dote ainsi d'une particularité acquise qui lui est propre, alors on est fondé de parler de culture au sens large8. »
Homosexualité et bisexualité animales
Article détaillé : Comportement homosexuel chez les animaux.
La sexualité animale ne se limite pas à des rapports monosexuels ou hétérosexuels
à intention reproductive. Ainsi, les comportements sexuels animaliers
peuvent avoir différents objets et revêtir de multiples formes. Les
spécialistes ont noté divers comportements analogues aux comportements
humains non reproductifs tels qu'homosexualité, bisexualité ou masturbation9.L'homosexualité au sens large (ou comportementaliste) se définit par des rapports sexuels et/ou amoureux entre individus de même sexe10.
Dans son livre Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity paru en 1999, le chercheur Bruce Bagemihl affirme que des comportements homosexuels animaux ont été observés chez près de 450 espèces animales (essentiellement des espèces qui ont peu de dimorphisme sexuel), dans chaque grande zone géographique et chaque groupe animal, et qu'ils peuvent être séparés en 5 groupes distincts : parade amoureuse, affection, relation sexuelle, vie en couple et comportement parental11. Les organisateurs de l'exposition Against Nature? affirmaient que des comportements homosexuels étaient retrouvés chez la plupart des groupes de vertébrés, mais aussi parmi les insectes, les araignées, les crustacés, les octopodes et les vers parasites, le phénomène étant reporté chez près de 1500 espèces animales et bien documenté chez 500 d'entre elles12.
Pour le professeur Thierry Lodé, de l'université de Rennes 113, « toutes les conduites sexuelles existent dans la nature » bien que les comportements exclusifs restent plutôt rares, l'évolution privilégiant toujours la reproduction. Toutefois, des chercheurs14,15,16 pensent que le qualificatif d'homosexualité ne peut pas être appliqué au règne animal car bien que le comportement homoérotique occasionnel soit présent chez certains, l'homosexualité au sens humain contemporain d'« attirance sexuelle exclusivement dirigée vers des partenaires de même sexe au détriment de la reproduction sexuée » n'est presque jamais observée, et ne constitue en aucun cas un acte « conscient ».
Masturbation animale
La masturbation au sens large est une pratique sexuelle consistant à stimuler les parties génitales dans le but d'obtenir ou de donner du plaisir ; cette pratique a été observée chez de nombreuses espèces, sauvages comme domestiques.Ces observations indiquent, selon les militants pro-masturbation, que cette pratique est totalement naturelle (bien que certains opposants à la masturbation contestent ces preuves). Le sujet est donc très controversé.[réf. nécessaire]
Autres comportements sexuels
- Des comportements sexuels entre adultes et petits ont été observés chez certaines espèces animales, comme les singes bonobos.
- Une jeune otarie de Kerguelen mâle a tenté de s'accoupler avec un manchot royal (dans les Île Marion). Le manchot s'en est sorti sans dommages ; les experts en éthologie recherchent encore la raison d'un tel comportement17.
Comportements sexuels culturels chez l'animal
Un exemple de comportement sexuel de l'ordre du culturel serait chez le bonobo l'utilisation d'objet pour la masturbation18.Voir aussi
Bibliographie et vidéographie
- (en) Anders Agmo Functional and dysfunctional sexual behavior [archive] Elsevier 2007
- (en) Bruce Bagemihl, Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity, Stonewall Inn Editions, 1999. ISBN 0-312-25377-X
- (en) John Roughgarden, Evolution's Rainbow : Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People, éd. University Press, 2004
- (fr) Thierry Lodé, La guerre des sexes chez les animaux, Odile Jacob, 2006. (ISBN 2-7381-1901-8)
- Documentaire Homosexualité animale (épisode de la série Animaux trop Humains [archive]), réalisé par Bertrand Loyer, Jessica Menendez et Stéphane Alexandresco, 2006. Distributeur : Off the Fence, Saint Thomas Productions.
Articles connexes
Liens externes
- (en) Article sur les études, débats et controverses [archive]
- (en) Article [archive] du National Geographic
- L'exposition Contre Nature ? [archive] au Musée d'Histoire Naturelle d'Oslo. Elle recense des pratiques homosexuelles chez 1 500 espèces.
- L'homosexualité animale [archive]
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