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Discussion Is there a thread about animal behavior? [We should have more]

Leonardo Part V

Leonardo Part V

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@BuFFooN made a curious post about how female dragonflies fake their death to avoid mating with ugly males.

In nature, there are a lot of examples of BP that we should explore and try to compare with our own.
 
@VideoGameCoper
 
There are not many.

Make one about how male peacocks court female peacocks to get a mate. The males are way better looking than the females, but the society is still gynocentric and the females have more SMV than the males.
 
  • Insects:
    • Tortoise beetles: Females have toughened wing covers that make it difficult for males to grasp them during mating attempts.
    • Water striders: Females possess genital shields that act as physical barriers, forcing males to work harder to mate.
    • Praying mantises: In some species, females may consume the male after mating, preventing him from mating with other females.
    • Damselflies: Some female damselflies have spines on their abdomens that can deter unwanted male advances.
  • Arachnids:
    • Nursery web spiders: Females choose mates based on the quality of "nuptial gifts" offered by males, potentially favoring less aggressive individuals.
    • Some orb-weaving spiders: Females are significantly larger than males, making it harder for males to force copulation.
  • Fish:
    • Guppies: Females have intricate vaginal structures that can hinder forced mating attempts, and they can also choose which sperm to use for fertilization.
    • Mosquitofish: Females prefer larger males, possibly because they offer better protection against harassment from smaller, more aggressive males.
  • Amphibians:
    • European common frog: Females may feign death to escape aggressive male mating attempts.
    • Some poison dart frogs: Females actively defend territories and can be aggressive towards males that intrude.
  • Reptiles:
    • Garter snakes: Females release pheromones that can make them less attractive to males, reducing unwanted attention.
  • Birds:
    • Ducks: Females have evolved complex vaginal morphologies, including spirals and dead-end pouches, to make forced copulation difficult.
    • Eurasian penduline tits: Females may destroy nests to prevent males from mating with other females, asserting control over their reproductive choices.
  • Mammals:
    • Spotted hyenas: Females have a pseudo-penis, an elongated clitoris that makes it challenging for males to mate without their cooperation.
    • Lions: Females form coalitions to defend against male infanticide and harassment.
    • Baboons: Female baboons form strong alliances to protect themselves and their offspring from aggressive males.
    • Bottlenose dolphins: Females form alliances for protection against male harassment and infanticide
 
  • Insects:
    • Tortoise beetles: Females have toughened wing covers that make it difficult for males to grasp them during mating attempts.
    • Water striders: Females possess genital shields that act as physical barriers, forcing males to work harder to mate.
    • Praying mantises: In some species, females may consume the male after mating, preventing him from mating with other females.
    • Damselflies: Some female damselflies have spines on their abdomens that can deter unwanted male advances.
  • Arachnids:
    • Nursery web spiders: Females choose mates based on the quality of "nuptial gifts" offered by males, potentially favoring less aggressive individuals.
    • Some orb-weaving spiders: Females are significantly larger than males, making it harder for males to force copulation.
  • Fish:
    • Guppies: Females have intricate vaginal structures that can hinder forced mating attempts, and they can also choose which sperm to use for fertilization.
    • Mosquitofish: Females prefer larger males, possibly because they offer better protection against harassment from smaller, more aggressive males.
  • Amphibians:
    • European common frog: Females may feign death to escape aggressive male mating attempts.
    • Some poison dart frogs: Females actively defend territories and can be aggressive towards males that intrude.
  • Reptiles:
    • Garter snakes: Females release pheromones that can make them less attractive to males, reducing unwanted attention.
  • Birds:
    • Ducks: Females have evolved complex vaginal morphologies, including spirals and dead-end pouches, to make forced copulation difficult.
    • Eurasian penduline tits: Females may destroy nests to prevent males from mating with other females, asserting control over their reproductive choices.
  • Mammals:
    • Spotted hyenas: Females have a pseudo-penis, an elongated clitoris that makes it challenging for males to mate without their cooperation.
    • Lions: Females form coalitions to defend against male infanticide and harassment.
    • Baboons: Female baboons form strong alliances to protect themselves and their offspring from aggressive males.
    • Bottlenose dolphins: Females form alliances for protection against male harassment and infanticide
The blackpill is everywhere
 
  • Insects:
    • Tortoise beetles: Females have toughened wing covers that make it difficult for males to grasp them during mating attempts.
    • Water striders: Females possess genital shields that act as physical barriers, forcing males to work harder to mate.
    • Praying mantises: In some species, females may consume the male after mating, preventing him from mating with other females.
    • Damselflies: Some female damselflies have spines on their abdomens that can deter unwanted male advances.
  • Arachnids:
    • Nursery web spiders: Females choose mates based on the quality of "nuptial gifts" offered by males, potentially favoring less aggressive individuals.
    • Some orb-weaving spiders: Females are significantly larger than males, making it harder for males to force copulation.
  • Fish:
    • Guppies: Females have intricate vaginal structures that can hinder forced mating attempts, and they can also choose which sperm to use for fertilization.
    • Mosquitofish: Females prefer larger males, possibly because they offer better protection against harassment from smaller, more aggressive males.
  • Amphibians:
    • European common frog: Females may feign death to escape aggressive male mating attempts.
    • Some poison dart frogs: Females actively defend territories and can be aggressive towards males that intrude.
  • Reptiles:
    • Garter snakes: Females release pheromones that can make them less attractive to males, reducing unwanted attention.
  • Birds:
    • Ducks: Females have evolved complex vaginal morphologies, including spirals and dead-end pouches, to make forced copulation difficult.
    • Eurasian penduline tits: Females may destroy nests to prevent males from mating with other females, asserting control over their reproductive choices.
  • Mammals:
    • Spotted hyenas: Females have a pseudo-penis, an elongated clitoris that makes it challenging for males to mate without their cooperation.
    • Lions: Females form coalitions to defend against male infanticide and harassment.
    • Baboons: Female baboons form strong alliances to protect themselves and their offspring from aggressive males.
    • Bottlenose dolphins: Females form alliances for protection against male harassment and infanticide
Great post! I recently came across an insect known as the "spider wasp." It's a type of wasp that lays its eggs inside a spider, and whenever they encounter each other, the spider has no chance of escaping, it's literally IMPOSSIBLE. The wasp is perfectly adapted to overpower the spider, ensuring its victory every time.

Now, you don't see people claiming that the Spider simply didn't improve its personality or didn't try hard enough.
 
Great post! I recently came across an insect known as the "spider wasp." It's a type of wasp that lays its eggs inside a spider, and whenever they encounter each other, the spider has no chance of escaping, it's literally IMPOSSIBLE. The wasp is perfectly adapted to overpower the spider, ensuring its victory every time.

Now, you don't see people claiming that the Spider simply didn't improve its personality or didn't try hard enough.
I will make more posts about Lamarkian evolution. We see biological cuckolding everywhere. For example, Orangutan males that grow flanges that signal dominance and dna proves they breed more than flange-less males.

But humans are probably the only species where males get psychologically cucked. We can't even rape and breed women because of fear of morality unlike many apes that are just physically inferior. We know human women must buy into the mating process or they'll hate their children.
 

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