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Birds and bees may be gay - museum
exhibition
Oslo -
The birds and the bees may be gay, according to the world's first
museum exhibition about homosexuality among animals.
With documentation of gay or lesbian
behaviour among giraffes, penguins, parrots, beetles, whales and
dozens of other creatures, the Oslo Natural History Museum concludes
human homosexuality cannot be viewed as "unnatural".
"We may have opinions on a lot of
things, but one thing is clear -- homosexuality is found throughout
the animal kingdom, it is not against nature," an exhibit statement
said.
Geir
Soeli, the project leader of the exhibition entitled "Against Nature",
told Reuters: "Homosexuality has been observed for more than 1,500
animal species, and is well documented for 500 of them."
The museum said the exhibition,
opening on Thursday despite condemnation from some Christians, was the
first in the world on the subject. Soeli said a Dutch zoo had once
organised tours to view homosexual couples among the animals.
"The sexual urge is strong in all
animals. ... It's a part of life, it's fun to have sex," Soeli said of
the reasons for homosexuality or bisexuality among animals.
One exhibit shows two stuffed female
swans on a nest -- birds sometimes raise young in homosexual couples,
either after a female has forsaken a male mate or donated an egg to a
pair of males.
One photograph shows two giant erect
penises flailing above the water as two male right whales rub
together. Another shows a male giraffe mounting another for sex,
another describes homosexuality among beetles.
One radical Christian said organisers
of the exhibition -- partly funded by the Norwegian government --
should "burn in hell", Soeli said. Laws describing homosexuality as a
"crime against nature" are still on the statutes in some countries.
Greek philosopher Aristotle noted
apparent homosexual behaviour among hyenas 2,300 years ago but
evidence of animal homosexuality has often been ignored by
researchers, perhaps because of distaste, lack of interest or fear or
ridicule.
Bonobos,
a type of chimpanzee, are among extremes in having sex with either
males or females, apparently as part of social bonding. "Bonobos are
bisexuals, all of them," Soeli said.
Still, it is unclear why
homosexuality survives since it seems a genetic dead-end.
Among theories, males can sometimes
win greater acceptance in a pack by having homosexual contact. That in
turn can help their chances of later mating with females, he said.
And a study of homosexual men in
Italy suggested that their mothers and sisters had more offspring.
"The same genes that give homosexuality in men could give higher
fertility among women," he said. -- Reuters Limited
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