On a darkish November afternoon at Southampton’s Metropolis Farm, the animals are going about their enterprise.
They’re all rescues. Penny the pig, a clutch of former battery farm chickens, three pygmy goats and Salvatore the cane snake, so orange and glossy he appears to be like as if he’s glowing from inside as he twines round my arm in loving, even sensual embrace.
All little miracles in their very own proper. However none so unusual because the dull-looking brown shells within the glass tank within the nook.
“Who’s that in there?” I ask Hannah, in whose cost they lie. “They’re African land snails”, she tells me. “They’ve simply laid their eggs. They had been each females, however being hermaphrodites, one modified intercourse. It was fairly a shock.”
Animals strike curious poses, sang the artist previously generally known as Prince, and new analysis bears him out.
A scientific report printed final week, detailing how serotine bats enact non-penetrative intercourse rituals in a Dutch church, raises all method of attention-grabbing questions on what animals stand up to in pursuit of delight or the transmission of their genes.
The bats have exhibited the primary instance – that we all know of – of mammals mating with out penetration. Scientists have lengthy been perplexed by the truth that the male’s erect penis is far wider than the feminine’s vagina, making penetration problematic at greatest. They now imagine that semen is transferred just by contact with the vulva.
It’s fascinating stuff. However it’s typical of people to think about that we now have the monopoly on creative strategies of sexual engagement. Cetaceans are notably artistic and numerous with regards to intercourse: having massive brains and skilled foraging ways means they’ve to seek out one thing to do with their down time. Dolphins are recognized to mate as much as 3 times in 5 minutes at nice velocity as they swim collectively, typically in massive numbers – a kind of mass orgy on the transfer.
Dolphins seem hooked on intercourse play, and males have been seen inserting their penises in sharks’ orifices, into the hole between turtles’ our bodies and shells, and even into useless fish. Their bigger cetacean kin are equally adventurous. I’ve watched, from the shores of Cape Cod, pods of extremely endangered north Atlantic proper whales – huge, 18 metre lengthy animals – partaking in foreplay for 3 hours or extra.
Counterintuitively, not less than to us, essentially the most wonderful side is that they arrive into shallow water to take action, rolling round each other’s slick black our bodies, touching one another with rubbery fins. It’s a show that appears fairly idyllic till you realise that, of their dedication to go on their genes, two males directly will enter a feminine. Proper whale males possess the biggest testes, weighing nearly a tonne, of any animal on earth; their penises are as much as three metres lengthy. As I appeared on at this leviathanic spectacle of lust from an in any other case abandoned seaside, I realised there was a gray seal on the fringe of the water, additionally watching, reluctant to get again within the sea for worry of the cetaceans tumbling in ecstasy.
After primates, whales and dolphins are closest to us in evolutionary phrases. Herman Melville famous in Moby-Dick (as a wry humorist, he can’t have been totally blind to the double-entendre of his title) that not like nearly each different animal, whales mate head to head. He put it coyly, to spare the blushes of his Victorian readers: “When overflowing with mutual esteem, the whales salute extra hominum [in the manner of human beings].” His phrase got here to thoughts within the Indian Ocean, when a pair of giant sperm whales conjoined, stomach to stomach, locked collectively on their sides, and blithely swam glassy-eyed and oblivious below our tiny fishing boat.
Cetaceans, like primates akin to bonobos, additionally blur the boundaries between what’s sexual, reproductive, cultural or social; like people, they separate intercourse and replica. Bonobos will use sexualised contact to defuse social tensions. Additionally they specific homosexuality readily and infrequently – as do whales.
Male killer whales recurrently have penetrative intercourse with one another, apparently rehearsing for mating with females. However what do we all know? The artists Gilbert & George received fairly excited once I advised them that whales practised homosexuality. Famend killer whale researcher Dr Lance Barrett-Lennard has recorded that, over the course of 126 area journeys, gay behaviour was overwhelmingly noticed, with heterosexual coupling not often seen. Queer is the norm the place whales are involved, it appears.
Sperm whales will typically contact one another with their pectoral or dorsal fins once they collect in socially lively teams. However mature males will even use erect penises (usually tucked, of their detumescent state, right into a slit of their bellies) as social appendages, apparently in greeting, or hooking different, youthful whales, probably their progeny, with them as a sort of embrace. (Sperm whales, by the best way, received their identify from human hunters who first pierced their nice sq. heads and believed that the milky oil that spilled out was semen.)
The fluid, Edenic otherness of the ocean appears to allow transformations of intercourse and gender. It’s the primordial place from which we got here, and more and more we realise that it’s not essentially the case that we people are the acme of evolution. Octopuses, as an example, symbolize another department of the evolutionary tree. What’s intercourse like for an animal every of whose arms incorporates a mind, and which might function nearly independently of one another? You’ll be able to see why Japanese artist Hokusai created that memorable picture of interspecies intercourse between a human and an octopus with these looking, penetrating tentacles. However there’s a horrible mortality in cephalopod intercourse. Feminine octopuses exhibit semelparity: that’s, they might mate with many males, however they die after a single being pregnant.
Cuttlefish additionally current curious poses, because the scientist Peter Godfrey-Smith relays in his fantastically unrestrained guide on cephalopods, Different Minds. In a “turning, unfussed and deliberate” choreography, “like a dance from the courtroom of some civilised French king”, they mate face to face, and after just a few moments of stillness, the male makes use of his left fourth arm to take a sperm packet and place it in a particular receptacle under the feminine’s beak.
The seaside is one other enviornment for such performances. Slipper limpets (Crepidula fornicata) clamp upon each other in little towers of seven or extra shells, steadily altering in intercourse from the biggest, oldest females on the backside to the youthful males on the high. If a feminine dies, a male will change intercourse and take their place.
On the different finish of the marine scale, walruses possess penis bones, generally known as baculum, helpful for assuaging the hassle of intercourse while you weigh one and a half tonnes. Many mammals have this attribute, however the walrus baculum is by far the biggest at 60cm lengthy, a sort of penile counterpart to the formidable tusks that lend them the majestic air of Arctic intercourse gods.
As Richard Sabin of the Pure Historical past Museum, who confirmed me such a bone within the museum’s secret shops, explains: “the baculum permits the male walrus to keep up insertion lengthy sufficient for the sperm to be delivered to succeed in their goal”. It’s a significant consideration when the feminine is just half as heavy.
On the subject of birds, issues get bizarre, to Tim Dee’s delight. Dee, writer and inveterate observer of the stranger issues on the planet of birds, tells me from his South African backyard concerning the native ostriches, whose males boast an appendage uncommon amongst birds: a pseudo-penis like “a floppy slab of pink meat”. He additionally observes that South African penguins “mate in entrance of their fellow penguins, who collect spherical like a tutting viewers, all gawping and disapproving directly”.
And but, Dee provides, the weirdest fowl intercourse is to be present in Britain, within the type of dunnocks – “apparently innocuous, even Victorian birds who sweetly peck concerning the shrubbery but have interaction in kinky boots stuff.”
“Males peck at females’ cloacas (the one orifice that birds use for each excretion and replica, additionally present in echidnas and duck-billed platypuses) to induce them to expel the sperm of a earlier accomplice earlier than changing that together with his personal. It’s Discreet Allure of the Bourgeoisie stuff”, Dee says, evoking the weird human mating scenes in Luis Buñel’s 1972 movie.
Jim Wilson, famous ornithologist and Arctic information, finds the main points of duck intercourse outstanding too – not least from a viewpoint of genital engineering. To keep away from undesirable consideration by males with their massive, corkscrew-shaped penises, feminine muscovy geese have developed clockwise-spiralled vaginas, Wilson says, which can be incompatible with the anticlockwise path of the males’ members if pressured.
One among Wilson’s favorite tales is of the feminine red-necked phalarope – unusually brightly colored in a world the place the males are principally the flashy ones. After mating and laying her eggs in Arctic breeding grounds, she leaves her accomplice to take care of them and flies off to mate with not less than one different male, perhaps extra. It relies on her temper, I assume.
However let’s not neglect that people are animals too, and intercourse makes us extra animal and transformative. There’s a memorable scene in W.G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn when, throughout an extended coastal stroll in Suffolk, the customarily dispassionate author appears to be like down from a cliff to a distant seaside under and sees a pair coupling as one animate organism, twitching “like some nice mollusc washed ashore … a single being, a many-limbed, two-headed monster that had drifted in from far out at sea, the final of a prodigious species”. Checked out dispassionately, it’s essential to admit, intercourse stays a decidedly unbelievable association, no matter species chances are you’ll be.
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This text by Philip Hoare was first printed by The Guardian on 28 November 2023. Lead Picture: Dolphins mating in Fernando de Noronha, Brazil. {Photograph}: João Vianna/Getty Photos.