Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Same-sex behavior is a nearly universal
phenomenon in the animal kingdom, common across species, from worms to frogs to
birds, concludes a new review of existing research.
"It's clear that
same-sex sexual behavior extends far beyond the well-known examples that
dominate both the scientific and popular literature: for example, bonobos,
dolphins, penguins and fruit flies," said Nathan Bailey, the first author of the
review paper and a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Biology at UC
Riverside.
There is a caveat, however. The review also reports that
same-sex behaviors are not the same across species, and that researchers may be
calling qualitatively different phenomena by the same name.
"For
example, male fruit flies may court other males because they are lacking a gene
that enables them to discriminate between the sexes," Bailey said. "But that is
very different from male bottlenose dolphins, who engage in same-sex
interactions to facilitate group bonding, or female Laysan Albatross that can
remain pair-bonded for life and cooperatively rear young."
Published
June 16 in the journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution, the review by Bailey
and Marlene Zuk, a professor of biology at UCR, also finds that although many
studies are performed in the context of understanding the evolutionary origins
of same-sex sexual behavior, almost none have considered its evolutionary
consequences.
"Same-sex behaviors—courtship, mounting or parenting—are
traits that may have been shaped by natural selection, a basic mechanism of
evolution that occurs over successive generations," Bailey said. "But our review
of studies also suggests that these same-sex behaviors might act as selective
forces in and of themselves."
A selective force, which is a sudden or
gradual stress placed on a population, affects the reproductive success of
individuals in the population.
"When we think of selective forces, we
tend to think of things like weather, temperature, or geographic features, but
we can think of the social circumstances in a population of animals as a
selective force, too," Bailey said. "Same-sex behavior radically changes those
social circumstances, for example, by removing some individuals from the pool of
animals available for mating."
Bailey, who works in Zuk's lab, noted
that researchers in the field have made significant strides in the past two and
a half decades studying the genetic and neural mechanisms that produce same-sex
behaviors in individuals, and the ultimate reasons for their existence in
populations.
"But like any other behavior that doesn't lead directly to
reproduction—such as aggression or altruism—same-sex behavior can have
evolutionary consequences that are just now beginning to be considered," he
said. "For example, male-male copulations in locusts can be costly for the
mounted male, and this cost may in turn increase selection pressure for males'
tendency to release a chemical called panacetylnitrile, which dissuades other
males from mounting them."
The review paper: