http://boingboing.net/2014/06/02/why-are-there-gay-lesbian-an.html


Why are there gay, lesbian, and bisexual people?






We know now that homosexuality is connected to genetics — and there's probably 
more than one gene involved.


But why would that trait have been selected for strongly enough to make it 
present in 5-to-15 percent of the population?


At The Conversation, geneticist Jenny Graves presents an interesting theory 
that I'd never heard before. Homosexuality is evolutionarily Why are there gay, 
lesbian, and bisexual people?






We know now that homosexuality is connected to genetics — and there's probably 
more than one gene involved. But why would that trait have been selected for 
strongly enough to make it present in 5-to-15 percent of the population?
At The Conversation, geneticist Jenny Graves presents an interesting theory 
that I'd never heard before.


Homosexuality is evolutionarily adaptive, according to this idea, because the 
same genes that give you women who love women and men who love men also give 
you men who love women and women who love men.


In fact, Graves suggests, it's better to think of these genes as "male loving" 
and "female loving" rather than "gay" or "lesbian" or "straight".


They may be common because these variant genes, in a female, predispose her to 
mate earlier and more often, and to have more children. Likewise, it would be 
surprising if there were not “female-loving genes” in lesbian women that, in a 
male, predispose him to mate earlier and have more children.




If [the] sisters, mother and aunts [of gay men] have more kids who share some 
of their genes, it would make up for the fewer children of gay males.


And they do. Lots more children. An Italian group showed that the female 
relatives of gay men have 1.3 times as many children as the female relatives of 
straight men. This is a huge selective advantage that a male-loving allele 
confers on women, and offsets the selective disadvantage that it confers on men.




This all puts an interesting twist on the whole "gay gene" conversation. A 
serious concern that plenty of queer people have about genetics research is the 
risk that, once specific genes for queerness are identified, people might start 
selectively aborting fetuses that have those genes or seeking out gene therapy 
to change them.




The good news is that the relationship between genetics and sexuality is 
probably more complicated than a simple, single-gene on/off switch. But it's 
also interesting to see that those complex genetics could be things that 
straight people, or at least some straight people, may share. If that's the 
case, it seems like it would make it a lot harder to stigmatize the minority 
for gene variants that occur across the population, or (at least) change how 
people thought about those gene variants.


Image: Some Rights Reserved by Quinn Dombrowski adaptive, according to this 
idea, because the same genes that give you women who love women and men who 
love men also give you men who love women and women who love men. In fact, 
Graves suggests, it's better to think of these genes as "male loving" and 
"female loving" rather than "gay" or "lesbian" or "straight".
They may be common because these variant genes, in a female, predispose her to 
mate earlier and more often, and to have more children. Likewise, it would be 
surprising if there were not “female-loving genes” in lesbian women that, in a 
male, predispose him to mate earlier and have more children.
If [the] sisters, mother and aunts [of gay men] have more kids who share some 
of their genes, it would make up for the fewer children of gay males.
And they do. Lots more children. An Italian group showed that the female 
relatives of gay men have 1.3 times as many children as the female relatives of 
straight men. This is a huge selective advantage that a male-loving allele 
confers on women, and offsets the selective disadvantage that it confers on men.
This all puts an interesting twist on the whole "gay gene" conversation. A 
serious concern that plenty of queer people have about genetics research is the 
risk that, once specific genes for queerness are identified, people might start 
selectively aborting fetuses that have those genes or seeking out gene therapy 
to change them.
The good news is that the relationship between genetics and sexuality is 
probably more complicated than a simple, single-gene on/off switch. But it's 
also interesting to see that those complex genetics could be things that 
straight people, or at least some straight people, may share. If that's the 
case, it seems like it would make it a lot harder to stigmatize the minority 
for gene variants that occur across the population, or (at least) change how 
people thought about those gene variants.


Image: Some Rights Reserved by Quinn Dombrowski


=============


Thank you & Best Regards,
आधन्यवाद तथा आपको प्रणाम,


Aditya Bondyopadhyay
आदित्य बन्द्योपाध्याय
(Sent from my iPhone/iPad)
(मेरे आईफ़ोन/आईपैड से भेजा गया)

Reply via email to