Mountainbikecel
Genetiker und Evolutionspsychologe.
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- Dec 19, 2020
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Semple recorded more than 550 copulation calls from seven different female baboons and analyzed their acoustic structure. He found that these complex vocalizations contained information related both to the female’s reproductive state (the vocalizations were more complex when females were closer to ovulation) and to the status of the male “inspiring” any given vocalization (calls were longer and contained more distinct sonic units during matings with higher-ranked males). Thus, in these baboons at least, listening males could presumably gain information as to their likelihood of impregnating a calling female, as well as some sense of the rank of the male they’d find with her if they approached.
which means that men who are scared to have sex with a girl might actually be scared of getting knocked out by a stronger male - that the whore who is supposed to love you and not getting you beaten up kindly invited with her noises
"...among these primates, ovulating females most often directed their invitations at males outside their own troop, thus bringing new blood into the mating mix."
which means that men who are scared to have sex with a girl might actually be scared of getting knocked out by a stronger male - that the whore who is supposed to love you and not getting you beaten up kindly invited with her noises
"...among these primates, ovulating females most often directed their invitations at males outside their own troop, thus bringing new blood into the mating mix."