By Jerome Taylor
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
It may not work for Ryan Giggs but as a get-out clause for philandering
finches it is just about perfect: I can't help cheating, it's in my genes.
Scientists studying the sexual behaviour of zebra finches have discovered
that promiscuity is passed down through generations, providing an insight
into how an animal's genetic make-up may influence its willingness to take
multiple partners.
Like mourning doves and swans, zebra finches generally form lifelong
relationships with a single partner. But small numbers of males and females
indulge in frequent extramarital sex.
Such behaviour among monogamous species has often puzzled ornithologists.
While the benefits of cheating for the males is clear – offering them an
opportunity to spread their genes further than fidelity would permit –
females who play away run considerable risks, including the loss of their
lifelong partner and a greater vulnerability to sexual diseases.
A new study by German scientists now suggests that cheating among finches
may be genetic, with the female offspring of philandering finches much more
likely to cheat than their monogamous counterparts.
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen spent
eight years recording the sexual behaviour of a captive population of more
than 1,500 finches over five generations. The behaviour was documented on
video and then genetic paternity tests were used to determine which finches
had sired the most offspring. Unsurprisingly, finches that chose multiple
partners tended to sire the largest number of offspring. But their female
offspring were also much more likely to cheat.
Wolfgang Forstmeier, one of the study's lead researchers, believes the
results highlight how genetic make-up plays a crucial role in dictating
sexual-behaviour traits and even passes between the sexes. The study is
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the
United States of America.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/the-bird-that-may-explain-why-people-are-unfaithful-2297556.html
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