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Same-sex behavior is a nearly universal phenomenon in the animal kingdom, common across species, from worms to frogs to birds, according to a review of existing research, funded by the University of California, Riverside.

"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.

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A female-female pair of Laysan albatross. Females cooperatively build nests and rear young when males are scarce, according to biologists at the University of California, Riverside.

Photo by Eric VanderWerf

However, the review paper points out, "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."

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An example of existing research was a study by Sara Lewis, an evolutionary ecologist at Tufts University, published in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology in November, 2008. Read the National Geographic News report about it: Homosexual Beetle Activity Offers Reproductive Edge. The picture above shows two beetles in a homosexual encounter.

Photo courtesy Sara Lewis, Tufts University

Published June 16 in the journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution, the review of existing research 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."

"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, a UCR news release about the research explained.

"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.

Evolutionary Consequences

"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."

According to UCR, the review paper:

  • Examines work done to test hypotheses about the origins of same-sex behavior in animals.
  • Provides a framework for categorizing same-sex behavior, for example, is it adaptive, not adaptive, occurs often, infrequently?
  • Discusses what has been discovered about the genetics of same-sex behavior, especially in the model organism, the fruit fly Drosophila, and in human beings.
  • Examines connections between human sexual orientation research, and research on non-human animals, and highlights promising avenues of research in non-human systems.

The reviewers expected the research papers they read for their article would give them a better understanding of the degree to which same-sex behaviors are heritable in animals, UCR said.

Genes vs. Environment

"How important are genes to the expression of these behaviors, compared to environmental factors?" Bailey said. "This is still unknown.

"Knowing this information would help us better understand how the behaviors evolve, and how they affect the evolution of other traits. It could also help us understand whether they are something that all individuals of a species are capable of, but only some actually express."

Bailey recommends that fellow evolutionary biologists studying same-sex behavior in animals adopt some of the research approaches that have been successful in human studies, UCR said.

"We have estimates, for example, of the heritability of sexual orientation in humans, but none that I know of in other animals," he said. "Scientists have also targeted locations on the human genome that may contribute to sexual orientation, but aside from the fruit fly, we have no such detailed knowledge of the genetic architecture of same-sex behavior in other animals."

Bailey and Zuk plan to begin experimentally addressing some of the many issues raised in their review.

Said Bailey, "We want to get at this question: what are the evolutionary consequences of these behaviors? Are they important in the evolution of mating behavior, or do they just add extra 'background noise'?

"We are pursuing work on the Laysan albatross, in which females form same-sex pairs and rear young together. Same-sex behavior in this species may not be aberrant, but instead can arise as an alternative reproductive strategy."

Related National Geographic News stories:

Homosexual Activity Among Animals Stirs Debate

Damselfly Mating Game Turns Some Males Gay

Rattlesnakes Show Strong Family Bonds, Study Says

Homosexual Beetle Activity Offers Reproductive Edge

Albatrosses, penguins, seals, and killer whales are among the charismatic species that will benefit from South Africa's declaration of a vast new marine protected area in the Southern Ocean.

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Grey-headed albatross photo courtesy Sam Petersen/WWF South Africa

At 70,000 square miles (180,000 square kilometers), the Prince Edward Islands Marine Protected Area will be the fourth largest ocean preserve on the planet. Only the protected zones around the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, Great Barrier Reef, and Phoenix Islands are larger.

The Oklahoma-size territory that South Africa is adding to Earth's protected marine areas is a haven for millions of birds, mammals, and other marine animals being squeezed out of safe places to feed and breed as overfishing and climate change impact their traditional range in the Southern Ocean.

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Antartic fur seal photo courtesy Fritz Pölking/WWF South Africa

The announcement by South Africa's Environmental Affairs Minister, Christoffel Johannes van Schalkwyk, came after many years of close cooperation between the South African government and WWF, a multinational conservation organization with world headquarters in Switzerland.

"South Africa's declaration to establish one of the world's largest marine protected areas around its Prince Edward Islands is a marine conservation achievement of global importance that will help protect a suite of spectacular wildlife," WWF said.

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Penguin colony photo courtesy Sam Petersen/WWF South Africa

The new conservation zone around the Prince Edward and Marion Islands is almost 800 miles (2,000 kilometers) south of South Africa in the Southern Ocean (see map below), and forms an important global biodiversity hotspot, which was subject to rampant poaching during the late 1990s, WWF said.

"This is a historic day in marine conservation in South Africa," said Deon Nel, head of the WWF Sanlam Living Waters Partnership, a collaboration between WWF and Sanlam, a leading financial services group in South Africa. "All of South Africa's current marine protected areas are located very close inshore. The commitment of the first large offshore marine protected area moves South Africa into a new era of marine conservation."

The Prince Edward Islands are among the world's most important and diverse regions, WWF added. "But the islands, home to albatrosses, penguins and killer whales, have been threatened by illegal and irresponsible fishing practices in the past. The illegal fishing vessels around the Prince Edward Islands were targeting Patagonian toothfish. And the albatross species were killed as bycatch in these operations," the conservation charity said in a news statement.

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Grey-headed albatross photo courtesy Sam Petersen/WWF South Africa

Given the scarcity of land masses in the Southern Ocean, sub-Antarctic islands contain vast populations of seals and seabirds, which use these islands to breed and molt and are therefore critical to the conservation of such species, WWF added.

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"South Africa has made a globally significant commitment to our oceans through its intention to declare this large marine protected area," said WWF International Director General Jim Leape. "The islands support some 13 percent of king penguins worldwide, and five species of albatross breed there together with 14 species of petrels."

Prince Edward Islands support 450,000 king penguins and 750,000 macaroni penguins. An estimated 5 percent of the world's southern rockhopper penguins also live there, as does a small population of about 3,000 gentoos.

Other birds colonizing the islands include 7,300 wandering albatrosses (44 percent of the total world population), 21,800 grey-headed albatrosses (the albatrosses in the two pictures above), 15,000 Indian yellow-nosed albatrosses (22 percent of the world population), 4,400 dark-mantled albatrosses, and a small population of 700 light-mantled sooty albatrosses.

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Photo of gentoo penguins courtesy Kevin Shafer/WWF South Africa

Among the marine mammals raising their young on the islands are 16,000 sub-Antarctic fur seals (a third of the world's population), 760 Antarctic fur seals, and 1,800 southern elephant seals.

Said WWF International's Jim Leape, "South Africa plays a key role with several other countries, including Australia, France and New Zealand, in protecting the amazing biodiversity and commercially important fisheries of the sub-Antarctic and, through this, helps to establish a fully representative, viable and effective marine protected area network for the Southern Ocean."

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Wandering albatross photo courtesy Fritz Pölking/WWF South Africa

About 15 percent of South Africa's 1,800-mile (3,000-kilometer) coastline is under marine protection. Marine protected areas create a framework for managing the country's fisheries and consolidating some of the world's top research, eco-tourism, sport diving and fishing sites, according to a South African Government Web site.

"Marine protected areas combine conservation with the development of tourism, and in this respect are the marine equivalent of national parks," the site says.

Read more about South Africa's marine protected areas >>

National Geographic News related stories:

Extinction Near for Albatross, Experts Warn

Antarctic Wildlife at Risk From Overfishing, Experts Say

King Penguins Declining Due to Global Warming

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Southern elephant seals photo courtesy Michel Gunther/WWF South Africa

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