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SNOWBIRD,
And
he’s likely to have lots of kids.
In a lab test, some 20 percent of male giant hissing roaches
went romantic when they met another male, says David Logue of the
Broods of baby roaches tended to be larger if the dad had shown a taste for courting other males, Logue said.
Maybe this abundance of young could end up explaining how male courtship persists, Logue says. So far, he says, he doesn’t see a benefit for it in its own right, but perhaps evolutionary forces have favored the male-female part of the syndrome and the male-male flirtation survives as spillover.
Let’s not declare anything a dubious spillover too fast,
cautions behavioral ecologist Jeff Lucas of
Logue agrees that he needs to check for possible benefits to male courtship before claiming it’s a nonadaptive spillover of the libido syndrome.
Even if the syndrome isn’t an odd spillover, if both parts of the syndrome have their own benefits, Lucas says, “that could be just as interesting.”
Found in: Biology and Life
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- Logue, D., et al. 2008. A behavioral syndrome for libido links homosexual courtship to reproductive success. Animal Behavior Society meeting. Aug. 16-20. Snowbird, UT.
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