Scientific News Biology To unknown science animals and plants FOUND! THE LONGEST BIRD PENIS EVER
FOUND! THE LONGEST BIRD PENIS EVER
North American scientists have discovered the longest bird penis ever - a
42.5cm organ belonging to a duck.
Dr Kevin McCracken of the University
of Alaska, Fairbanks, and colleagues,
report in this week's Nature
that they have found a specimen of the Argentine lake duck (Oxyura vittata)
that has a penis as long as its body - nearly half a metre long.
This has extended an earlier estimate of the length of the duck's
corkscrew-shaped penis, which was 20cm.
"It's a fascinating bit of anatomy they've discovered
here. It really is unusual," commented bird mating expert Dr Raoul Mulder from the
University
of Melbourne.
Most male birds don't have penises - they copulate by briefly touching
genital openings, called a 'cloacal kiss'," he explained.
Dr Mulder said a number of duck species and ostriches have
penises, but this
was definitely the longest ever encountered.
Dr McCracken and colleagues speculate that the giant penis may be an example
of 'runaway' sexual selection, where female preference drives male anatomy to
ever-greater extremes, as in the peacock's tail.
Dr Mulder believes this may be a bit of
anthropomorphising, however.
"I'm not fond of the 'nudge nudge, wink wink' comments by the
authors,"
he said.
The authors write that this species is "promiscuous and boisterous in
their sexual activity", which means that there is likely to be stiff
competition by drakes to be the father of ducklings.
One finding in support of this idea, they suggest, is that the drake's penis
has a brush-like tip, which they say the males probably use to scrub the sperm
of previous mates from the female’s oviduct.
Mulder agreed this was likely, but felt another suggestion by the authors -
that males might use an everted penis as a "display" to attract
females - was not.
"They are being rather speculative, and it seems not much is known about
this bird and we need to observe its behaviour in the wild before we can
understand what function this penis might have," he said.
The authors acknowledge that many questions
remain: How much of the penis
does the drake actually insert? And does the anatomy of the female make them
unusually difficult to inseminate?
They conclude, nevertheless, that their new specimen will help them better
understand sexual selection and sperm competition in birds.
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Online News
Publishing date: September 25, 2001
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