Sex in the Wild: Gorillas Face Off
Just in time for Valentine’s Day comes a story no reporter can resist: the first known photographs of gorillas engaged in, um, . . . (this is a G-rated Website, I believe) expressing their love face-to-face.
Scientists from the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology were minding their own business recently while studying western lowland gorillas in Nouabalé-Ndoki
Face-to-face (or, technically, ventro-ventral) copulation is extremely rare in the animal kingdom. Before lowland gorillas joined the club, only people and bonobos (a chimp cousin known for really, really enjoying recreational sex) had been known to look at their partner while mating. From time to time, a scientist in the field reported seeing mountain gorillas mate face-to-face, but the sightings were like those of Bigfoot: no photo, no count. Captive western gorillas have also been known to mate face-to-face, but scientists always wondered if that was an artifact of living in a zoo, not natural.
Thomas Breuer of the Max Planck says, “we can’t say how common this manner of mating is, but it has never been observed with western gorillas in the forest. It is fascinating to see similarities between gorilla and human sexual behavior.” Let that serve as inspiration for the 14th.
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Sharon Begley is the science columnist and science editor of Newsweek. She is the coauthor of the 2002 book The Mind and the Brain and the author of the 2007 book Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain.
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