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Monogamy --the practice of mating with a single individual for an extended period of time--isn't
that popular in the animal kingdom. Only about 3% of mammals are monogamous, and, although
95% of birds pair off (at least for one breeding season), paternity tests have revealed that
the avian world is chock-full of cheaters.
The least loyal bird species might be the superb fairywren: they form lifelong bonds
and, if you watched a pair of them from morning 'til night for an entire breeding season,
you'd think they were perfectly faithful. But that's only because female fairywrens
cheat under cover of darkness. Using radio transmitters to track their movements, researchers
discovered that fertile females make daily, pre-dawn flights to other territories. These
trips only last about 15 minutes, but apparently that's more than long enough-- DNA tests show
that just 25% of baby superb fairywrens are their father's biological children.
So modern genetics might be deflating our romantic notions about lovebirds, but from
a biological standpoint, social monogamy without sexual monogamy--that is, pairing up with
one individual and then copulating with others on the side--makes a lot more sense than absolute
sexual loyalty. For birds, pairing up is a good strategy because their young require
a ton of care, so males increase their chances of successful reproduction if they stick around
and lend a beak. On the other hand, putting all of one's eggs in a single basket is a
risky proposition, so it also makes sense for males to try and slip some of their genetic
material into a few other nests if they can. Females, of course, can't have more than one
nest, but for their part they can try to sneak in some variety.
Cheating might also help explain the otherwise unexpected physical differences between males
and females in apparently monogamous species. We've long had a solid explanation for male/female
dimorphism in explicitly non-monogamous species: if a male plans to mate with many females,
he needs to win their affection and fend off other suitors. Over thousands of generations,
the traits that help him successfully mate can become more and more pronounced, even
if they serve absolutely no other purpose.
For example, male gorillas--who fight each other for exclusive mating rights with the
females in their clan-- are much larger than female gorillas, while male and female gibbons,
which are monogamous, are the same size.
Which brings us to our favorite primates, homo sapiens. There are undeniable physical
differences between males and females--but it's unclear whether they're pronounced enough
to suggest that our ancestors lived in harems like gorillas or whether our differences stem
from a monogamous but adulterous society like the superb fairywren's.
One thing is clear: among all the species on Earth, monogamy is rare, and sexual monogamy
is rarer.
There is, however, at least one known example of perfect, lifelong fidelity, and its name
is Diplozoon paradoxum. When two of these young flatworms find each other, they literally
fuse together to form what looks like a single organism, and this adultery-free union lasts
for their entire long and amorous lives... which they spend sucking blood from fishgills.
A truly romantic attachment!