Sex is as complex and confusing for other animals as it is for humans: The thrill of the new puts a female cricket in the mood, but lizard ladies thrive on commitment. Female crickets mark their mates so they don't have sex with the same cricket twice, according to Tracie Ivy and her colleagues at Illinois State University. To keep track of her exploits, a female cricket leaves a chemical imprint on a partner during sex. If she reencounters a male bearing her particular mark—or the mark of her identical twin sister—she will often refuse to mate. The goal, Ivy says, is for the cricket mothers to get good genes, and "if they mate with the same male over and over, it's like buying a lot of lottery tickets with the same number." Painted dragon lizards don't need to be so picky, because a single lizard never produces young after ...
Ladies' Night in the Animal Kingdom
Discover the fascinating female cricket mating behavior that ensures genetic diversity in offspring through chemical imprints.
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