Salad

‘Part of the evolutionary fabric of our societies’: Same-sex sexual behavior in primates may be a survival strategy, study finds

Same-sex sexual behavior among primates could be shaped partly by specific environmental and social conditions, according to a new study comparing 59 species.

Same-sex sexual behavior (SSB) in animals is increasingly recognized in the scientific community as widespread, as it’s documented across the animal kingdom in about 1,500 species. Untangling how and why it emerged across so many diverse species is challenging, however. The new study, published Jan. 12 in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, found SSB may be beneficial — at least for primates — when ecological conditions are harsh and social conditions are complex.

Related posts

AI ‘mirages’ mean tools used to analyze medical scans could fabricate their findings

sys.admin

Scientists may have seen a star collapse directly into a black hole without exploding first

sys.admin

Exotic prime numbers could be hiding inside black holes

sys.admin

Leave a Comment