Thursday, October 24, 2019
Reproduction :: essays research papers
 For some time she had watched his movements,  appearing coyly in his haunts. And now, had it  paid off? Doubtless, he was in love. His muscles  were taut; he swooped through the air more like  an eagle than a Greylag gander. The only problem  was, it was not for her that he then landed in a  flurry of quacks and wingbeats, or for her that he  dashed off surprise attacks on his fellows. It was,  rather, for another - for her preening rival across  the Bavarian lake. Poor goose. Will she mate with  the gander of her dreams? Or will she trail him for  years, laying infertile egg clutches as proof of her  faithfulness? Either outcome is possible in an  animal world marked daily by scenes of courtship,  spurning and love triumphant. And take note: these  are not the imaginings of some Disney screen-16  writer. Decades ago Konrad Lorenz, a famed  Austrian naturalist, made detailed studies of  Greylags and afterwards showed no hesitation in  using words like love, grief and even  embarrassment to describe the behavior of these  large, social birds. At the same time he did not  forget that all romance - animal and human - is tied  intimately to natural selection. Natural selection  brought on the evolution of males and females  during prehistoric epochs when environmental  change was making life difficult for single-sex  species such as bacteria and algae. Generally,  these reproduced by splitting into identical copies  of themselves. New generations were thus no  better than old ones at surviving in an altered  world. With the emergence of the sexes, however,  youngsters acquired the qualities of two parents.  This meant that they were different from both -  different and perhaps better at coping with tough  problems of survival. At the same time, nature had  to furnish a new set of instincts which would make  "parents" out of such unreflective entities as  mollusks and jellyfish.. The peacock's splendid  feathers, the firefly's flash, the humpback whale's  resounding bellow - all are means these animals  have evolved to obey nature's command: "Find a  mate. Transmit your characteristics through time!"  But while most males would accept indiscriminate  mating, females generally have more on their  minds. In most species, after all, they take on  reproduction's hardest chores such as carrying  young, incubating eggs and tending newborns.  Often they can produce only a few young in a  lifetime. (Given half a chance, most males would  spawn thousands.) So it's no surprising that the  ladies are choosy. They want to match their  characteristics with those of a successful mate. He  may flap his wings or join a hockey team, but  somehow he must show that his offspring will not  likely be last to eat or first in predatory jaws.  					    
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