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Bisexual Species
DATE: 15 Jul 2008, 2:56 pm / MOOD: Gay

An article from <url=http://www.sciam.com/sciammind/>Scientific American Mind Magazine</url> ;


Quote:
Bisexual Species: Unorthodox Sex in the Animal Kingdom Homosexual behavior is common in nature,and it plays an important role in survival.
By Emily V. Driscoll

Two penguins native to Antarctica met one spring day in 1998 in a tank at the Central Park Zoo in midtown Manhattan. They perched atop stones and took turns diving in and out of the clear water below. They entwined necks, called to each other and mated. They then built a nest together to prepare for an egg. But no egg was forthcoming: Roy and Silo were both male.

Robert Gramzay, a keeper at the zoo, watched the chinstrap penguin pair roll a rock into their nest and sit on it, according to newspaper reports. Gramzay found an egg from another pair of penguins that was having difficulty hatching it and slipped it into Roy and Silo’s nest. Roy and Silo took turns warming the egg with their blubbery underbellies until, after 34 days, a female chick pecked her way into the world. Roy and Silo kept the gray, fuzzy chick warm and regurgitated food into her tiny black beak.

Like most animal species, penguins tend to pair with the opposite sex, for the obvious reason. But researchers are finding that same-sex couplings are surprisingly widespread in the animal kingdom. Roy and Silo belong to one of as many as 1,500 species of wild and captive animals that have been observed engaging in homosexual activity. Researchers have seen such same-sex goings-on in both male and female, old and young, and social and solitary creatures and on branches of the evolutionary tree ranging from insects to mammals.

Unlike most humans, however, individual animals generally cannot be classified as gay or straight: an animal that engages in a same-sex flirtation or partnership does not necessarily shun heterosexual encounters. Rather many species seem to have ingrained homosexual tendencies that are a regular part of their society. That is, there are probably no strictly gay critters, just bisexual ones. “Animals don’t do sexual identity. They just do sex,” says sociologist Eric Anderson of the University of Bath in England.

Nevertheless, the study of homosexual activity in diverse species may elucidate the evolutionary origins of such behavior. Researchers are now revealing, for example, that animals may engage in same-sex couplings to diffuse social tensions, to better protect their young or to maintain fecundity when opposite-sex partners are unavailable—or simply because it is fun. These observations suggest to some that bisexuality is a natural state among animals, perhaps Homo sapiens included, despite the sexual-orientation boundaries most people take for granted. “[In humans] the categories of gay and straight are socially constructed,” Anderson says.

What is more, homosexuality among some species, including penguins, appears to be far more common in captivity than in the wild. Captivity, scientists say, may bring out gay behaviors in part because of a scarcity of opposite-sex mates. In addition, an enclosed environment boosts an animal’s stress levels, leading to a greater urge to relieve the stress. Some of the same influences may encourage what some researchers call “situational homosexuality” in humans in same-sex settings such as prisons or sports teams.

Making Peace
Modern studies of animal homosexuality date to the late 19th century with observations on insects and small animals. In 1896, for example, French entomologist Henri Gadeau de Kerville of the Society of Friends of Natural Sciences and the Museum of Rouen published a drawing of two male scarab beetles copulating. Then, during the first half of the 1900s, various investigators described homosexual behavior in baboons, garter snakes and gentoo penguins, among other species. Back then, scientists generally considered homosexual acts among animals to be abnormal. In some cases, they “treated” the animals by, say, castrating them or giving them lobotomies.

At least one early report, however, was more than descriptive, yielding insight into the possible origins of the behavior. In a 1914 lab experiment Gilbert Van Tassel Hamilton, a psychopathologist practicing in Montecito, Calif., reported that same-sex behavior in 20 Japanese macaques and two baboons occurred largely as a way of making peace with would-be foes. In the Journal of Animal Behavior Hamilton observed that females offered sex to the more dominant macaques of the same sex: “homosexual behavior is of relatively frequent occurrence in the female when she is threatened by another female, but it is rarely manifested in response to sexual hunger.” And in males, he penned, “homosexual alliances between mature and immature males may possess a defensive value for immature males, since they insure the assistance of an adult defender in the event of an attack.”

More recently, some researchers studying bonobos (close relatives of the chimpanzee) have come to similar conclusions. Bonobos are highly promiscuous, and about half their sexual activity involves same-sex partners. Female bonobos rub one another’s genitals so often that some scientists have suggested that their genitalia evolved to facilitate this activity. The female bonobo’s clitoris is  “frontally placed, perhaps because selection favored a position maximizing stimulation during the genital-genital rubbing common among females,” wrote behavioral ecologist Marlene Zuk of the University of California, Riverside, in her 2002 book Sexual Selections: What We Can and Can’t Learn about Sex from Animals. Male bonobos have been observed to mount, fondle and even perform oral sex on one another.

Such behavior seems to ease social tensions. In Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape (University of California Press, 1997), Emory University primatologist Frans B. M. de Waal and his co-author photographer Frans Lanting wrote that “when one female has hit a juvenile and the juvenile’s mother has come to its defense, the problem may be resolved by intense GG-rubbing between the two adults.” De Waal has observed hundreds of such incidents, suggesting that these homosexual acts may be a general peacekeeping strategy. “The more homosexuality, the more peaceful the species,” asserts Petter Böckman, an academic adviser at the University of Oslo’s Museum of Natural History in Norway. “Bonobos are peaceful.”

In fact, such acts are so essential to bonobo socialization that they constitute a rite of passage for young females into adulthood. Bonobos live together in groups of about 60 in a matriarchal system. Females leave the group during adolescence and gain admission to another bonobo clan through grooming and sexual encounters with other females. These behaviors promote bonding and give the new recruits benefits such as protection and access to food.

Defended Nest
In some birds, same-sex unions, particularly between males, might have evolved as a parenting strategy to increase the survival of their young. “In black swans, if two males find each other and make a nest, they’ll be very successful at nest making because they are bigger and stronger than a male and female,” Böckman says. In such cases, he says, “having a same-sex partner will actually pay off as a sensible life strategy.”

In other instances, homosexual bonding between female parents can boost the survival of offspring when male-female pairings are not possible. In birds called oystercatchers, intense competition for male mates would leave some females single were it not for polygamous trios. In a study published in 1998 in Nature, zoologist Dik Heg and geneticist Rob van Treuren, both then at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, observed that roughly 2 percent of oystercatcher breeding groups consist of two females and a male. In some of these families, Heg and van Treuren found, the females tend separate nests and fight over the male, but in others, all three birds watch over a single nest. In the latter case, the females bond by mounting each other as well as the male. The cooperative triangles produce more offspring than the competitive ones, because such nests are better tended and protected from predators.

Such arrangements point to the evolutionary fitness of stable social relationships, whatever their type. Biologist Joan E. Roughgarden of Stanford University believes that evolutionary biologists tend to adhere too strongly to Darwin’s theory of sexual selection and have thus largely overlooked the importance of bonding and friendship to animal societies and the survival of their young.“ [Darwin] equated reproduction with finding a mate rather than paying attention to how the offspring are naturally reared,” Roughgarden says.

Protection of progeny, social bonding and conflict avoidance may not be the only reasons animals naturally come to same-sex relationships. Many animals do it simply “because they want to,” Böckman says. “People view animals as robots who behave as their genes say, but animals have feelings, and they react to those feelings.” He adds that “as long as they feel the urge [for sex], they’ll go for it.”

A recent finding indicates that homosexual behavior may be so common because it is rooted in an animal’s brain wiring—at least in the case of fruit flies. In a study appearing earlier this year in Nature Neuroscience, neuroscientist David E. Featherstone of the University of Illinois at Chicago and his colleagues found that they could switch on homosexual leanings in fruit flies by manipulating a gene for a protein they call “genderblind,” which regulates communication between neurons that secrete and respond to the neurotransmitter glutamate.

Males that carried the mutant genderblind gene—which depressed levels of the protein by about two thirds—were uncharacteristically attracted to the chemical cues exuded by other males. As a result, these mutant males courted and attempted to copulate with other males. The finding suggests that wild fruit flies may be prewired for both heterosexual and homosexual behavior, the authors write, but that the genderblind protein suppresses the glutamate-based circuits that promote homosexual behavior. Such brain architecture may enable same-sex behavior to surface easily, supporting the notion that it might confer an evolutionary advantage in some circumstances.

The Captivity Effect
In some less social species, homosexual behavior is almost unheard of in wild animals but may surface in captivity. Wild koalas, which are mostly solitary, seem to be strictly heterosexual. But in a 2007 study veterinary scientist Clive J. C. Phillips of the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and his colleagues observed 43 instances of homosexual activity among female koalas living in a same-sex enclosure at the Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary. The captive females shrieked male mating calls and mated with one another, sometimes participating in multiple encounters of up to five koalas. “The behavior in captivity was certainly enhanced in terms of homosexual activity,” Phillips says.

He believes that the females acted this way in part because of stress. Animals often experience stress in enclosed habitats and may engage in homosexual behavior to relieve that tension. A lack of male partners probably also played a role, Phillips suggests. When female koalas are in heat, their ovaries release the sex hormone estrogen, which triggers mating behavior—whether or not males are present. This hardwired urge to copulate, even if expressed with a female partner, might be adaptive. “The homosexual behavior preserves sexual function,” Phillips says, enabling an animal to maintain its reproductive fitness and interest in sexual activity. In males, this benefit is even more obvious: homosexual behavior stimulates the continued production of seminal fluid.

A lack of opposite-sex partners is also thought to help explain the prevalence of homosexuality among penguins in zoos. In addition to several gay penguin couplings in the U.S., 20 same-sex penguin partnerships were formed in 2004 in zoos in Japan. Such behavior “is very rare in penguins’ natural habitats,” says animal ecologist Keisuke Ueda of Rikkyo University in Tokyo. Thus, Ueda speculates that the behavior—which included both male pairings and female couplings—arose as a result of the skewed sex ratios at zoos.

Researchers have found still other reasons for homosexual behavior in domesticated cattle—which is such a common occurrence that farmers and animal breeders have developed terms for it. “Bulling” refers to male pairs mounting, and “going boaring” is its female counterpart. For cows, the behavior is not just a stress reliever. It is a way to signal sexual receptivity. The females mount one another to signal their readiness to mate to the bulls—which, in captivity, may cause a breeder to know when to bring in a suitable opposite-sex partner.

Homosexual mounting is much rarer among cattle in the wild, Phillips asserts, based on his research on gaurs in Malaysia, a wild counterpart to domesticated cattle. “Cattle evolved in the forest, so a visual signal was not going to be useful for them,” he says.

Stress and the greater availability of same-sex partners may similarly contribute to the practice of homosexual acts among self-described heterosexual humans in environments such as the military, jails and sports teams. In a study published this year in the journal Sex Roles, Anderson found that 40 percent of 49 heterosexual former high school football players attending various U.S. universities had had at least one homosexual encounter. These ranged from kissing to oral sex to threesomes that included a woman. In team sports, homosexuality is “no big deal and it increases cohesion among members of that team,” Anderson claims. “It feels good, and [the athletes] bond.”

In stressful same-sex environments such as prisons or a war zone, heterosexuals may engage in homosexual behavior in part to relieve tension. “Homosexuality appears mostly in social species,” Böckman says. “It makes flock life easier, and jail flock life is very difficult.”

Altered Spaces
In recent decades zoo officials have tried to minimize the stresses of captivity by making their enclosures more like animals’ natural habitats. In the 1950s zoo animals lived behind bars in barren enclosures. But since the late 1970s zoo homes have become more hospitable, including more open space, along with plants and murals representative of an animal’s natural habitat. The Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) regulates everything from cage dimensions to animal bedding. The AZA also outlines enrichment activities for captive creatures: for instance, two golden brown Amur leopards at the Staten Island Zoo regularly play with a papier-mâché zebra, an animal they have never seen in the flesh.

Researchers hope such improvements might affect animal behavior, making it more like what occurs in the wild. One possible sign of more hospitable conditions might be a rate of homosexuality more in line with that of wild members of the same species. Some people, however, contest the notion that zookeepers should prevent or discourage homosexual behavior among the animals they care for.

And whereas captivity may engender what appears to be an unnaturally high level of homosexual activity in some animal species, human same-sex environments might bring out normal tendencies that other settings tend to suppress. That is, some experts argue that humans, like some other animals, are naturally bisexual. “We should be calling humans bisexual because this idea of exclusive homosexuality is not accurate of people,” Roughgarden says. “Homosexuality is mixed in with heterosexuality across cultures and history.”

Even Silo the penguin, who had been coupled with Roy for six years, displayed this malleability of sexual orientation. One spring day in 2004 a female chinstrap penguin named Scrappy—a transplant from SeaWorld in San Diego—caught his eye, and he abruptly left Roy for her. Meanwhile Roy and Silo’s “daughter,” Tango, carried on in the tradition of her fathers. Her chosen mate: a female named Tazuni.


 

 



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I’ve got a new pet torture instrument...
DATE: 19 Jun 2008, 7:11 am / MOOD: Tired

Well,back from my latest little hospital visit yesterday.There are not words to express the loathing I feel towards hospitals.This time they've handed me my very own,personal medieval torture instrument and a long-term treatment plan around it's use.

To be fair,it is for my own good,both immediate and long term.Doesn't make it any more enjoyable though.

The tendons in my left hand are shrinking/tightening/retracting and the muscles are wasting,causing clawing of the hand.They have been for some years but over the last two the shrinkage has accelerrated considerably.Without treatment I can expect to lose as good as all usage of my hand within the next few years.Something made all the more undesireable by the fact that I am left-handed.

It all started from my breaking my arm when I was nine.There was a lot of damage,I lost a lot of blood,very messy and painful all round.Added to which it was at a decidely awkward point on my arm,hard below the 'ball and socket' of my shoulder..The surgeon wanted to amputate,he said the damage was so great that the arm would never grow properly anyway and that the best thing was to remove it while I was still young enough to 'adjust'.Thankfully my father put his foot down and insisted that they at least attempt to save it.And probably would have forcibly removed me from the hospital and driven the length of the country,if he'd had to,to find one that would.

Upshot was that he was right and they were wrong.There was the immediate need to operate one way or the other,obviously,and two other,less major,bouts of surgery in the year following.Turned out that not only had I near completely shattered and fragmented that (small) section of bone,but that some of the slivers had sliced through several veins(which wasn't actually that much of a problem) and nerves(which,potentially,was).They patched everything up as best they could,set me on a course of several years of physiotherapy,and sat back and waited,so to speak.But my arm did grow normally.Unfortunately,I didn't get away with it all scot-free.

Within two years they diagnosed arthritus.It was also blatently obvious by then that there had been long-term nerve-damage.My left arm has noticably,measurably reduced sensitivity to both temperature and touch/pressure.Then,in my late teens,the tendon shrinkage began.Or became noticable.Whichever.As it has worsened it has reached the point where my hand claws not only when I am asleep or relaxed in water,but whenever I relax anywhere and often when I don't,when I'm attempting to actively use it.The clawing is rapidly heading towards permanent.

Which brings me to my new,pet torture instrument.It's basically a small row of clamps to be screwed(yes,screwed,I swear this thing is a direct descendant of the thumbscrew)onto my fingers and thumb.These clamps are attached to a framework and mechanism for extending it-the idea being that it gradually stretches your tendons,so reversing or halting or,at worst,considerably slowing the damage.I'm meant to wear it at night while I sleep.Every night.

 

If this doesn't work,the only thing left will be further surgery.Cutting and attempted extending of the tendons.A path I really would prefer to avoid,if possible.

Tired,depressed and in considerable discomfort.

Want to just slip away into the shadows and disappear.



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Unsafe Site?!!! Since WHEN?!!!
DATE: 14 Jun 2008, 3:48 pm / MOOD: Angry

Well,I did have a banner link to Gothopia up on my MySpace page.

But I've had to take it down.

Why?

I put the banner link up with the intention of promoting a site I like,have faith in and think doesn't get hyped anywhere near enough-not to damage it's reputation.

It appears that MySpace considers Gothopia to be an unsafe site.

No matter how I set the link,their blocking page comes up when you try to link to it.

Hardly gives curious parties a good impression if that's what they get if they try following the link.

I think they're taking the piss.

Ok,I've been an infrequent visitor until recently,but I've never had an serious problems from this site yet.

Losing connection to here,'server overload',sure,get that all the time.

*shrugs*

Inconvienient,but so what,hardly a machine killer or identity stealer.

I have never had so much as one single virus,trojan or spambot as a traceable result of using Gothopia.

Which is a bloody damn sight more than can be said for MySpace.

They've also done it to one of the corset/clothing sites I had a banner link to there-even though she has a page with them and runs a business with a good,solid,traceable,public trading history.

I've messaged her letting her know,needless to say.

Who the hell do they think they are,casting slurs on people's businesses like that?!

Taking the ArchAngel or what?!



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Busy,busy,busy :)
DATE: 13 Jun 2008, 12:15 pm / MOOD: Happy

Been a busy,busy bee today 

I've links up now to this place on my MySpace and VampireFreaks profiles

Going to see if I can get a link up at 'Vampire,Realm Of Darkness',though not sure what might be the best way of going about that

My boots arrived today,so had a delivery to juggle with the school run

Two Father's Day presents to collect where Royal Mail screwed up delivering them

Done well there-a boxset of 'The Prisoner' and a boxset of 'Tom and Jerry'

Some frantic bidding and counter-bidding on good old Ebay

School Sports Day to go and cheer at then celebration dinner afterwards

All while I'm busy trying to work on a Wedding Dress I've been commisioned to make and a basque that I'm working on for myself

Animals fed and cleaned and usual housework done

Plus work,of course

All in all,a pretty good day



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Clubhammer + Computer = Stress Relief
DATE: 12 Jun 2008, 11:58 am / MOOD: Cranky

I'm more than a little bit miffed with my computer right now

Though maybe it's my internet connection that's really the problem

I'm something of a computer moron,truth be told,so I really don't know

Anyhow,crux of the problem,I can't access the bulletins here on Gothopia

I can post them(though currently my friends list is so small it makes more sense to blog things than bulletin them still)and I can read and post blogs,edit my profile,upload pictures...everything else that I've tried so far...

So why won't this bloody machine let me read the bulletins?!

Grrrr

My net connection is through a 3 wireless modem...it should be able to cope...it does on other sites

I like this site.A lot.I'm intending to be quite active here,which I rarely am on sites.I first joined up about a year ago now,I think,but then lost my net connection and couldn't really do anything with my page.So I'm only just learning my way around now,following my recent reappearance.I've no idea what might be causing this problem

I definately need to look into this...it now turns out it won't let me make any changes to the apperance of my profile  I like the skin and layout here,they're grand,but it would be nice to be able to change occasionally

Ah,to hell with this,I'm off to browse the site in search of alternative banners for plugging it



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Boots!Boots!!My Kingdom for some boots!!!
DATE: 11 Jun 2008, 11:08 am / MOOD: Demonic

Thank whatever powers there may be for Ebay,they've saved the day again I've been trying to find a new pair of boots for a week or two now-I wouldn't have believed it could be so hard 

To be fair,if I'd been looking for knee or thigh highs,with heels taller than I am and more bits of random metal hanging off them than off the average 14 year old Emo's face,then I'd have been spoilt for choice There's more pairs of gorgeous dress boots out there than I could wear in 9 lifetimes.But what I needed was a pair of flat,comfortable,practical,everyday boots.If they looked good too,well,bonus.So,not being free to head down London right now,I've done the rounds of 5 local towns now,visiting every last shoe shop in them....

To be informed in all of them,by openly scandalised assistants,that women don't need,couldn't possibly need,boots in summer.Men do,it seems.Apparently men need even more styles in summer than they do in winter.But women don't need even one.We should all be running around in glittery sequinned silver or white pvc 6" stilletto strappy sandles,like good little trophies.Apparently.

So,I hit Ebay.A pair of purple Doctor Martins are now winging their way to me with hopefully a gorgeous metallic blue pair soon to follow(I'm winning so far anyhow).And with several stunning dresses and a period lace parasol and various other bits and bobs with bids running,hopefully I'll have an outfit worthy of getting a few pictures up soon Now all I need is to find a few decent masks...



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The Watch for the modern Goth-I want this...
DATE: 10 Jun 2008, 10:01 am / MOOD: Vampy

Browsing the net this evening I stumbled across this little beauty...I want this...

It's a concept watch-unfortunately not as yet in production-by a designer called David Huffman.It's the watch for the modern Goth The only thing it needs adding to make it perfect is mobile phone capability

Check out the pictures,if you like what you see,there's a link to the site where I found it below them 

 

http://www.yankodesign.com/index.php/2008/05/29/dandi-gentlemen-need-tech-too/



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