Monday, June 4, 2007

And by butterflies, I mean...


Calvin Reid -- Publishers Weekly, 2/1/1999

"Birds do it and bees do it. But according to a new and exhaustively researched work from St. Martin's Press, the animal kingdom d s it with much greater sexual diversity -- including homosexual, bisexual and nonreproductive sex -- than the scientific community and society at large have previously been willing to accept.

In fact, the most revolutionary conclusion in the book may be that "animals do it because they like it," said St. Martin's editor Michael Denneny. Representing more than 10 years of research and writing Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity by Bruce Bagemihl is the first work to bring together more than two centuries of observation and "documentation of homosexual behavior in the natural world" for general readers, according to the author.

The book, Bagemihl told PW, "challenges traditional ideas in biology -- not all animal sexual behavior revolves around reproduction and procreation." In fact, Bagemihl claims that for centuries scientists have looked for ways to "explain" animal homosexuality. The book presents what he hopes will be a new scientific paradigm for the field -- he calls it "biological exuberance" -- described as an acceptance of the "extravagant excess and multiplicity of animal sexual behaviors."

His theory and documentation encompasses a whole range of "animal sexual and gender variance," including same-sex courtship, sexual encounters and homosexual parenting in more than 300 bird and mammal species worldwide, with many never-before-published illustrations and photographs.

And yes, said Bagemihl, the book is also meant to address "homophobia and bias in the scientific community," as well as to challenge social critics who, he says, often base their antigay positions on claims that homosexuality d sn't appear in nature. Bagemihl points to one study among many referring to "a lowering of moral standards among butterflies" to buttress his claims of a homophobic bias in the scientific documentation of animal homosexuality over the centuries.

The book offers a general discussion of the forms and history of observation of animal homosexuality as well as a reference section that details specific sexual behaviors for a wide range of mammals and birds. Elephants, apparently, have very little heterosexual activity, and in some bird species, said Denneny, 80% to 90% of their sexual activity is homosexual."

2 comments:

Green Butterfingers said...

birds do it, bees do, even educated fleas do it..

Anonymous said...

Are you an educated flea? I am one of those trained fleas that use tiny trapezes... I fly/flea through the air with the greatest of ease, let me tell you.