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  • Anyone in the room thought about sex today?

  • (Laughter)

  • Yeah, you did.

  • Thank you for putting your hand up over there.

  • Well, I'm here to provide you with

  • some biological validation

  • for your sordid daydreams.

  • I'm here to tell you a few things

  • that you might not have known about wild sex.

  • Now, when humans think about sex,

  • male and female forms

  • are generally what come to mind,

  • but for many millions of years,

  • such specific categories didn't even exist.

  • Sex was a mere fusion of bodies

  • or a trickle of DNA

  • shared between two or more beings.

  • It wasn't until about 500 million years ago

  • that we start to see structures akin to a penis

  • or a thing that gives DNA out,

  • and a vagina, something that receives it.

  • Now invariably, you're probably thinking about

  • what belongs to our own species,

  • these very familiar structures,

  • but the diversity that we see in sexual structures

  • in the animal kingdom that has evolved

  • in response to the multitude of factors

  • surrounding reproduction

  • is pretty mind-blowing.

  • Penile diversity is especially profuse.

  • So this is a paper nautilus.

  • It's a close relative of squid and octopus,

  • and males have a hectocotylus.

  • Just what is a hectocotylus?

  • A detachable, swimming penis.

  • It leaves the [body of the male],

  • finds the female through pheromonal cues in the water,

  • attaches itself to her body

  • and deposits the sperm.

  • For many decades, biologists actually felt

  • that the hectocotylus was a separate organism altogether.

  • Now, the tapir is a mammal from South America.

  • And the tapir has a prehensile penis.

  • It actually has a level of dexterity in its penis

  • much akin to what we have with our hands.

  • And it uses this dexterity

  • to bypass the vagina altogether

  • and deposit sperm directly into the female's uterus,

  • not to mention it's a pretty good size.

  • The biggest penis in the animal kingdom,

  • however, is not that of the tapir.

  • The biggest penis-to-body-size ratio

  • in the animal kingdom actually belongs

  • to the meager beach barnacle,

  • and this video is actually showing you

  • what the human penis would look like

  • if it were the same size as that of a barnacle.

  • (Laughter)

  • Mm-hm. (Laughter)

  • So with all of this diversity in structure,

  • one might think, then, that penises

  • are fitting neatly into vaginas all over the place

  • for the purposes of successful reproduction.

  • Simply insert part A into slot B,

  • and we should all be good to go.

  • But of course, that doesn't exactly happen,

  • and that's because we can't just take form into account.

  • We have to think about function as well,

  • and when it comes to sex,

  • function relates to the contributions made

  • by the gametes, or the sperm and the eggs.

  • And these contributions are far from equal.

  • Eggs are very expensive to make,

  • so it makes sense for females to be very choosy

  • about who she shares them with.

  • Sperm, on the other hand, is abundant and cheap,

  • so it makes more sense for males

  • to have a more-sex-is-better strategy

  • when it comes to siring members

  • of future generations.

  • So how do animals cope

  • with these very incongruent needs between the sexes?

  • I mean, if a female doesn't choose a particular male,

  • or if she has the ability to store sperm

  • and she simply has enough,

  • then it makes more sense for her to spend her time

  • doing other biologically relevant things:

  • avoiding predators, taking care of offspring,

  • gathering and ingesting food.

  • This is, of course, bad news for any male

  • who has yet to make a deposit in her sperm bank,

  • and this sets the scene for some pretty drastic strategies

  • for successful fertilization.

  • This is bedbug sex,

  • and it's aptly termed traumatic insemination.

  • Males have a spiked, barbed penis

  • that they literally stab into the female,

  • and they don't stab it anywhere near her vagina.

  • They stab it anywhere in her body,

  • and the sperm simply migrates

  • through her hemolymph to her ovaries.

  • If a female gets too many stab wounds,

  • or if a stab wound happens to become infected,

  • she can actually die from it.

  • Now if you've ever been out for a nice,

  • peaceful walk by the lake

  • and happened to see some ducks having sex,

  • you've undoubtedly been alarmed,

  • because it looks like gang rape.

  • And quite frankly, that's exactly what it is.

  • A group of males will grab a female,

  • hold her down,

  • and ballistically ejaculate their spiral-shaped penis

  • into her corkscrew-shaped vagina

  • over and over and over again.

  • From flaccid to ejaculation in less than a second.

  • Now the female actually gets the last laugh, though,

  • because she can actually manipulate her posture

  • so as to allow the sperm of certain suitors

  • better access to her ovaries.

  • Now, I like to share stories like this with my audiences

  • because, yeah, we humans,

  • we tend to think sex, sex is fun, sex is good,

  • there's romance, and there's orgasm.

  • But orgasm didn't actually evolve

  • until about 65 million years ago

  • with the advent of mammals.

  • But some animals had it going on quite a bit before that.

  • There are some more primitive ways

  • of pleasing one's partner.

  • Earwig males have either

  • really large penile appendages

  • or really small ones.

  • It's a very simple genetically inherited trait

  • and the males are not otherwise any different.

  • Those that have long penile appendages

  • are not bigger or stronger

  • or otherwise any different at all.

  • So going back to our biological minds, then,

  • we might think that females should choose

  • to have sex with the guys that have the shorter appendages,

  • because she can use her time for other things:

  • avoiding predators, taking care of young,

  • finding and ingesting food.

  • But biologists have repeatedly observed

  • that females choose to have sex

  • with the males that have the long appendages.

  • Why do they do this?

  • Well, according to the biological literature,

  • "During copulation, the genitalia of certain males

  • may elicit more favorable female responses

  • through superior mechanical or stimulatory interaction

  • with the female reproductive tract."

  • Mm-hm.

  • These are Mexican guppies,

  • and what you see on their upper maxilla

  • is an outgrowth of epidermal filaments,

  • and these filaments basically form

  • a fish mustache, if you will.

  • Now males have been observed to prod

  • the female's genital opening

  • prior to copulating with her,

  • and in what I have lovingly termed the Magnum, P.I. hypothesis,

  • females are overwhelmingly more likely to be found

  • with males that have these fish mustaches.

  • A little guppy porn for you right there.

  • So we've seen very different strategies

  • that males are using when it comes to

  • winning a female partner.

  • We've seen a coercion strategy in which sexual structures are used in a forceful way

  • to basically make a female have sex.

  • We've also seen a titillation strategy

  • where males are actually

  • pleasing their female partners into choosing them

  • as a sex partner.

  • Now unfortunately, in the animal kingdom,

  • it's the coercion strategy that we see

  • time and time again.

  • It's very common in many phyla,

  • from invertebrates to avian species,

  • mammals, and, of course, even in primates.

  • Now interestingly, there are a few mammalian species

  • in which females have evolved specialized genitalia

  • that doesn't allow for sexual coercion to take place.

  • Female elephants and female hyenas

  • have a penile clitoris,

  • or an enlarged clitoral tissue that hangs externally,

  • much like a penis,

  • and in fact it's very difficult to sex these animals

  • by merely looking at their external morphology.

  • So before a male can insert his penis into a female's vagina,

  • she has to take this penile clitoris

  • and basically inside-out it in her own body.

  • I mean, imagine putting a penis into another penis.

  • It's simply not going to happen

  • unless the female is on board with the action.

  • Now, even more interesting is the fact

  • that elephant and hyena societies

  • are entirely matriarchal:

  • they're run by females, groups of females,

  • sisters, aunts and offspring,

  • and when young males attain sexual maturity,

  • they're turfed out of the group.

  • In hyena societies, adult males

  • are actually the lowest on the social scale.

  • They can take part in a kill only after

  • everybody else, including the offspring.

  • So it seems that when you take the penis power

  • away from a male,

  • you take away all the social power he has.

  • So what are my take-home messages from my talk today?

  • Well, sex is just so much more

  • than insert part A into slot B

  • and hope that the offspring run around everywhere.

  • The sexual strategies and reproductive structures

  • that we see in the animal kingdom basically

  • dictate how males and females will react to each other,

  • which then dictates how populations and societies

  • form and evolve.

  • So it may not be surprising to any of you

  • that animals, including ourselves,

  • spend a good amount of time thinking about sex,

  • but what might surprise you is the extent to which

  • so many other aspects of their lives and our lives

  • are influenced by it.

  • So thank you, and happy daydreaming.

  • (Applause)

Anyone in the room thought about sex today?

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