Tim Birkhead is Professor of Behavioral Ecology at the University of Sheffield.
Males are promiscuous and ferociously competitive. Females—both human and of other species—are naturally monogamous. That at least is what the study of sexual behavior after Darwin assumed, perhaps because it was written by men. Only in recent years has this version of events been challenged. Females, it has become clear, are remarkably promiscuous and have evolved an astonishing array of strategies, employed both before and after copulation, to determine exactly who will father their offspring.
Tim Birkhead reveals a wonderful world in which males and females vie with each other as they strive to maximize their reproductive success. Both sexes have evolved staggeringly sophisticated ways to get what they want—often at the expense of the other. He introduces us to fish whose first encounter locks them together for life in a perpetual sexual embrace; hermaphrodites who "joust" with their reproductive organs, each trying to inseminate the other without being inseminated; and tiny flies whose seminal fluid is so toxic that it not only destroys the sperm of rival males but eventually kills the female. He explores the long and tortuous road leading to our current state of knowledge, from Aristotle’s observations on chickens, to the first successful artificial insemination in the seventeenth century, to today’s ingenious molecular markers for assigning paternity. And he shows how much human behavior—from the wife-sharing habits of Inuit hunters to Charlie Chaplin’s paternity case—is influenced by sperm competition.
Lucidly written and lavishly illustrated, with a wealth of fascinating detail and vivid examples, Promiscuity is the ultimate guide to the battle of the sexes.
This book would be highly informative, in terms of sexual selection (or more specifically, sperm competition,) for non-majors in EEB, and it is also a delight to read.
评分This book would be highly informative, in terms of sexual selection (or more specifically, sperm competition,) for non-majors in EEB, and it is also a delight to read.
评分This book would be highly informative, in terms of sexual selection (or more specifically, sperm competition,) for non-majors in EEB, and it is also a delight to read.
评分This book would be highly informative, in terms of sexual selection (or more specifically, sperm competition,) for non-majors in EEB, and it is also a delight to read.
评分This book would be highly informative, in terms of sexual selection (or more specifically, sperm competition,) for non-majors in EEB, and it is also a delight to read.
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2025 onlinetoolsland.com All Rights Reserved. 本本书屋 版权所有