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Questioning persistent myths about same-sex behaviour in nature
Can we predict who we love from our genetics alone? For LGBT History Month in October, Dr. Kaylee Byers is joined by co-host Dr. Julia Monk to look at what our genes teach us about diverse forms of sexuality and identity. Starting by witnessing a pair of male penguins cozying up, our hosts join flippers to unearth research from naturalists who have recorded same-sex behaviour in the wild. Then they invite socio-geneticist Dr. Robbee Wedow to guide us through his own research, where he puts the question: "Is there a gay gene?" to the test.
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Highlights:
(00:30) A match made in pebbles
(07:15) Buried papers, Darwinian Paradoxes, and reframing same-sex behaviour
(20:27) Is there a Gay Gene? 'Damned if you do damned if you don't.'
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Learn-A-Long: https://bit.ly/3FNfz8C
—
References:
Gay Penguins Klaus, Jones ‘rekindled their romance’ at Melbourne aquarium | New York Daily News
Nature is queer. Queer ecologists want us to learn from it. | Grist
Is nature Queer? | Out & About | CBC
Terra Nova notebooks describing penguin sexual behaviours acquired by the Museum | Natural History Museum
An alternative hypothesis for the evolution of same-sex sexual behaviour in animals | Nature Ecology & Evolution
Large-scale GWAS reveals insights into the genetic architecture of same-sex sexual behavior | Science
Many Genes Influence Same-Sex Sexuality, Not a Single ‘Gay Gene’ | The New York Times
No 'gay gene', but study finds genetic links to sexual behavior | Reuters
How Earnest Research Into Gay Genetics Went Wrong | Wired
—
Credit:
Gentoo Penguin · Pygoscelis papua | xeno-canto
"No Gay Gene"-Born This Way Is A Lie Says GOP Lawmaker | Michael McIntee
Australian current affairs programme "The 7.30 Report" (1995) "Gay Brains" | The 7.30 Report
Nature or Nurture - Are People Born Gay? | Naked Science
By Genome BC4.3
1212 ratings
Questioning persistent myths about same-sex behaviour in nature
Can we predict who we love from our genetics alone? For LGBT History Month in October, Dr. Kaylee Byers is joined by co-host Dr. Julia Monk to look at what our genes teach us about diverse forms of sexuality and identity. Starting by witnessing a pair of male penguins cozying up, our hosts join flippers to unearth research from naturalists who have recorded same-sex behaviour in the wild. Then they invite socio-geneticist Dr. Robbee Wedow to guide us through his own research, where he puts the question: "Is there a gay gene?" to the test.
—
Highlights:
(00:30) A match made in pebbles
(07:15) Buried papers, Darwinian Paradoxes, and reframing same-sex behaviour
(20:27) Is there a Gay Gene? 'Damned if you do damned if you don't.'
—
Learn-A-Long: https://bit.ly/3FNfz8C
—
References:
Gay Penguins Klaus, Jones ‘rekindled their romance’ at Melbourne aquarium | New York Daily News
Nature is queer. Queer ecologists want us to learn from it. | Grist
Is nature Queer? | Out & About | CBC
Terra Nova notebooks describing penguin sexual behaviours acquired by the Museum | Natural History Museum
An alternative hypothesis for the evolution of same-sex sexual behaviour in animals | Nature Ecology & Evolution
Large-scale GWAS reveals insights into the genetic architecture of same-sex sexual behavior | Science
Many Genes Influence Same-Sex Sexuality, Not a Single ‘Gay Gene’ | The New York Times
No 'gay gene', but study finds genetic links to sexual behavior | Reuters
How Earnest Research Into Gay Genetics Went Wrong | Wired
—
Credit:
Gentoo Penguin · Pygoscelis papua | xeno-canto
"No Gay Gene"-Born This Way Is A Lie Says GOP Lawmaker | Michael McIntee
Australian current affairs programme "The 7.30 Report" (1995) "Gay Brains" | The 7.30 Report
Nature or Nurture - Are People Born Gay? | Naked Science

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