The rise and fall of the penis bone
From cats and dogs to primates and rodents, the males of many mammal species have a special genital bone called the baculum... Females often possess a bone analogous to the baculum called
the baubellum or os clitoris...
After looking across 954 mammal species to check for the presence or
absence of a baculum, Dean and his colleagues determined that the
enigmatic bone independently evolved nine times and was subsequently
lost in 10 different lineages. This means that the baculum is not an
ancestral trait, but something that has popped up over and over again in
mammalian history...
“There is nothing in common among species with a baculum versus species
without,” Dean says. And solving the mystery “is not some weird niche of
science.” The rapid and repeated evolution of bacula, Dean says, “is an
absolutely fundamental pattern of evolution in almost all sexually
reproducing organisms.
More at the
Washington Post. Embed:
A collection of penis bones from brown bears. (Muséum de Toulouse)
Thanks. I'll never watch Star Trek: Enterprise the same way ever again.
ReplyDelete"...something that has popped up over and over again..." I see what you did there.
ReplyDeleteTalk about synchronicity, fifteen minutes ago I was reading on this subject in the Economist (12/17/16, pg 76 - I'm behind) which referenced: Postcopulatory sexual selection influences baculum evolution in primates and carnivores - https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0ahUKEwjI6uKYqLnRAhXpylQKHe9YBcIQFgghMAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Frspb.royalsocietypublishing.org%2Fcontent%2F283%2F1844%2F20161736&usg=AFQjCNH_e_NqHRdQKUxD3xGsYKedr2qj7g which answers the question
ReplyDeleteEven though I have a personal background in academic research, I continue to be gobsmacked by the depth and detail of some of today's ongoing studies. Thank you for the link Bub.
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