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"Animals have done it all." Oral sex, masturbation, homosexual sex ...
This evolutionary biologist is showing just how widespread sexual diversity is among animals.

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Animals
Transcript
00:00We haven't invented anything.
00:06We just haven't.
00:07You know, animals have done it all.
00:09There is oral sex, for example, which is often seen in nature, is seen in bats.
00:15And when they do, the success of pregnancy actually increases.
00:21Some fish, the males have little whiskers in their mouth that they use to tickle the
00:25female genitalia for the exact same reason.
00:37Dolphins have sex all the time.
00:39They have sex not just males with females, but also females with females and males with
00:43males.
00:44Females have been observing rubbing each other's clitorises with their snouts and their flippers.
00:51And they have also been observed masturbating, which basically involves them finding objects
00:56on the forest floor that they can rub up against.
00:59We did this study looking at the dolphin clitoris, the morphology of the dolphin clitoris.
01:04What we found was very definite evidence that the clitoris seems to be functioning for pleasure.
01:21The fact that animals have sex outside of just purely reproductive purposes would generally
01:27be a good indication that there's another goal to that sexual interaction, right?
01:32Many people have argued that they're practicing for the real thing.
01:36It might be also some kind of social cohesion.
01:38Bonobos are apes, close relatives of chimpanzees, and they have a very female-oriented society.
01:47And female bonobos have been seen having a lot of homosexual sex.
01:52These sexual interactions help to solidify bonding between females because they cooperate
01:57together quite a bit.
01:59And they have very well-developed clitorises.
02:01I know that they certainly seem to have pleasure during sexual interactions, like in many,
02:18many primates that have been studied in the lab.
02:21You know, females, you can observe them, they're grimacing, they're vocalizing, they're rolling
02:26their eyes, they're curling their toes.
02:28So having all sorts of reactions that are consistent with a pleasure response and even
02:34orgasm.
02:35So homosexuality in nature is super widespread.
02:43We have known this for a very long time.
02:47In fact, you know, there is this famous explorer who went down to the Antarctica and he watched
02:55the penguins behaving.
02:56This was in the 1800s.
02:58And he came back absolutely shocked to find all this diversity of sexual behavior.
03:04And so he never reported it.
03:05He like was so shocked because culturally, of course, and socially back then it was terrible.
03:11And I think that that's what's happened with many researchers.
03:13In the 90s, we had this beautiful book called Biological Exuberance that sort of brought
03:19it all back to everyone's face to say, oh, you think homosexual behavior is weird?
03:25Look how many animals are having it.
03:26And the examples in that book include absolutely every taxa of animals from insects, fish,
03:33birds, mammals, primates, everybody.
03:37So the question is almost not, you know, is homosexual behavior common?
03:42But it's like, who's not having it?
03:44Because it seems like everyone is having it, honestly.
03:51Male and female is just one possible outcome of evolution.
03:56There are fungi that have 10,000 mating types.
04:00They're like male, female, what's that?
04:01Of course, sex change, you know, the blue-headed rats are one of the best known example.
04:07You have one dominant male and he controls a whole group of females.
04:11But if that male dies, the next largest female becomes the male in the group.
04:18She's like, where's the male?
04:19There's no male.
04:20She's not going to be the male.
04:21And she starts biting everyone, becoming super aggressive.
04:25And then in a matter of days, she goes from being a female with ovaries and eggs to being
04:31a male with testes and sperm.
04:39Males should be more eager and females should be more coy and that females, you know, have
04:44to be seduced and that they don't want sex as much as males do.
04:48So that was kind of like the old story, but a much different story has emerged more recently.
04:54So for example, with birds, we know that females are actively very sexual and they're just
05:00as you would expect with males, that when it is advantageous to have more sex, they
05:05will try to have more sex as well.
05:15People will only learn what they're exposed to.
05:18And if they never hear these topics talked about in the context of, of course, this is
05:23what animals do, this is totally normal, then they're not aware of it.
05:29But it's also, as I was saying, the fault of the scientist to some degree, because when
05:35we have seen this behavior in the past, we've been very reluctant to talk about it.
05:40The other problem is that then even when that information has become available, it's not
05:44widespread.
05:45I feel that animals are perfectly capable of having complex emotional and inner lives.
05:56I think that the more we go forward, the more we're going to be hearing about this amazing
06:01diversity of sexual strategies in nature.