Anonym skrev 2012-04-23 11:17:18 följande:
Jadu, hur vet du att ditt djur vill något öht? Djur har väl ett jävligt tydligt kroppsspråk, det vet väl alla som hållt på med djur nån gång? Finns det någon särskild anledning till att en zoofil inte skulle kunna läsa sitt djurs kroppsspråk annat än att "de är ju onormala och äckliga"?
Förövrigt:
"Different studies show
prostitution exists among different species of
animals such as
Adélie Penguins,
chimpanzees, and
crab-eating macaque.
[1][2][3] Penguins use stones for building their
nests. Based on a 1998 study, media reports stated
[1] that a shortage of stones led female
Adélie Penguins[4][2] to trade sex for stones. The female penguins, even when in a committed relationship, will exchange sexual favors with strange males for the
pebbles they need to build their
nests.
[1] Prostitution is also observed among chimpanzees, who trade food for sex.
[3]"
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostitution_among_anim...
"
While it is commonly believed that animal sexuality is instinctive and thus somewhat mechanistic, research regularly records that many animals are sexual opportunists, partaking in sexual relations with individuals of visibly distinct species.[48] This is more visible in domesticated species and animals in captivity, as domestication commonly selects for increased breeding rate (and so an accelerated breeding cycle has commonly arisen in domesticated species over the centuries), and also because these species are more easily observed by humans. Nevertheless, animals have been observed in the wild to attempt sexual activity with other species or indeed inanimate objects.
In the wild, where observation is harder, genetic studies have shown a "large number" of inter-species hybrids, and other investigations describe productive and non-productive inter-species mating as a "natural occurrence".[49] Recent genetic evidence strongly suggesting this has occurred even within the history of the human species, and that early humans often had sexual activity with other primate species,[50] is considered below.
Hybrid offspring can result from two organisms of distinct but closely related parent species, although the resulting offspring is not always fertile.
Due to the difficulties of observation, interspecies sex of this kind between two top-level predators, occurring in the wild, was only conclusively documented with the finding of a grizzly-polar bear hybrid in April 2006.[51] Again, as with lions and tigers, the two species would normally not share enough common territory to provide adequate opportunity for much cross-species sexual activity[citation needed].
Animal sexual advances on, and attempted interactions with, humans and other species, have been documented by ethologists such as Kohler, Gerald Durrell and Desmond Morris, as well as authoritative researchers such as Birute Galdikas who studied orangutans in Borneo. Philosopher and animal welfare activist Peter Singer reports:
While walking through the camp with Galdikas, my informant was suddenly seized by a large male orangutan, his intentions made obvious by his erect penis. Fighting off so powerful an animal was not an option, but Galdikas called to her companion not to be concerned, because the orangutan would not harm her, and adding, as further reassurance, that 'they have a very small penis' ... though the orangutan lost interest before penetration took place.
[52]
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_sexual_behaviourjaja, ofta jag pallar läsa allt det. tyvärr. kvittar vad dem gör med varandra, huvudsaken är att vi människor som är mer intelligenta ej ska förgripa oss på de små liven. du kanske sätter på din papegoja as we speak?