Here’s a topic to provoke your interest, if not your curiosity:
the mating rituals of capuchin monkeys.
After all, you might want to improve your dating skills by
getting in touch with your inner Darwinian forebear.
Anyway, scientists have discovered that when female capuchin
monkeys want to mate, they throw rocks at desirable male monkeys. Then they run
off, the better to allow the males to chase them.
Most of the time the rocks do not hit the male monkeys, but
when they do, apparently, they manage to get the male’s erotic attention. I
suppose it makes the males feel wanted or selected.
This piece of ritualized behavior demonstrates that male primates are not naturally inclined to force themselves on unwilling females.
Before the most recent studies, scientists had observed that
female monkeys would try to attract male lust by whining or pouting. Sometimes
they would run up to a male, touch him, and then scurry off.
Obviously, these are all easily recognized variants on
female flirting behavior. Now, the latest scientific research has demonstrated
that throwing rocks counts as one of the
most successful ways to elicit male desire.
New York Magazine has the compelling story:
Capuchins
(like humans) must perform some sort of mating ritual, since they don't display
physical indicators of fertility. But this sort of behavior has never been
witnessed in the wild before, say the scientistsobserving the
monkeys. Previously, they reported, females would pout or whine loudly or
touch males and run away in order to show their affections. But, as every
dating book tells the girl monkeys, the game has changed. If these girl monkeys
really want to snag a suitable monkey-mate, they're going to have to pick up
the rock.
The rationale for these exercises lies in the fact that female
capuchins, like female humans do not, as New York explains, “display physical
indicators of fertility.”
Human females have been known to use fashion and cosmetics
to send out the right signals to the right males. And they have added elaborate courtship rituals to express interest without expressing too much interest. If all else fails, there
are always “the rules.” Obviously, it all makes good Darwinian sense.
The most recent research, however, has made an important contribution to our understanding. It has offered a definitive
justification for Title IX.
I thought you’d want to know.
2 comments:
Racy post, Stuart. I thought this was a family-friendly blog.
Tip
Very funny post. Will tell my daughters about this.
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