Gibt es in der Tierwelt auch so etwas wie Monogamie?
Ich würde jetzt wild vermuten bei vögeln, aber da weiß ich auch nicht ob das stimmt
Ich würde jetzt wild vermuten bei vögeln, aber da weiß ich auch nicht ob das stimmt
USA : 9.834.000 km2 Deutschland: 357.592 km2 Ist Deutschland sozusagen der kleine Bruder der USA?
Hi, habe heute als ich mit mein Hund gegangen bin etwas sehr komisches gesehen. Mein Hund hat seit Tagen Angst eine bestimmte Strecke zu gehen und ich habe mich gefragt warum. Und heute hatte er die ganze Zeit an einem Grundstück an einer Mauer hoch geguckt, als ich weiter ging hörte ich etwas am Grundstück…
Hab so ein junges blondes schlankes attraktives Mädchen gefunden, die ich besuchen könnte für 30 min 120€ für Sex und etc. Möchte sie gern besuchen, weil sie nur kurz in meiner Stadt ist. Aber wollte kein Geld mehr dafür ausgeben, weil ich paar Tage später wieder will und es teurer wird usw. Was kann ich…
Hi, Ich fliege dieses Jahr im Winter nach Malaysia und tauche sehr gerne. Das Problem ist nur, dass ich nur an der Westküste Malaysias tauchen gehen kann und ich dadurch die ganzen geilen Tauspots wie Sipadan Islands usw. nicht besuchen gehen kann. Deshalb wollte einfach mal fragen ob ihr auch gute Tauchspots an der Westküste…
In principle, there is everything possible somewhere – nature is very diverse in principle.
But that’s why nature, uh, is “complicated.” There are no simple answers.
Aaaaso: “The” birds are not monogamous. But there are species of which one thought (Attention: Past form!), they are. Specifically, the duck birds, in particular geese, and there, in particular, the abnormality of the swans.
You have a firm partner, you often see them with the firm partner, you know that they live with him even if “man” doesn’t see them, … they are considered to be a romanticized epitome of monogamy badly.
That they are not, science has become aware lately. At the moment when DNA tests were so cheap that ornithologists could afford to simply test large stocks of swan populations.
Result: Many descendants of couples, had another producer. No one had observed that swans were going outside until then.
Intermediate: Swans live socially monogamous, sexual but not.
Other example: Penguins are (usually) extremely monogamous – but they do not live together. However, at the breeding season they not only manage to return to the breeding ground on time, no, they also pair with the same partner. After the end of the breeding season, you float again separate paths.
Intermediate: Penguins are not socially monogamous, but sexual.
Overall Conclusion: It’s complicated. ; And it’s not always the way it seems.
With the birds I can add geese, Albatrosse and Tölpel.
Deep sea anglers are also monogamous. Since it is so hard to find a partner down there, males and females grow together. Other fish such as thread fish or some small ash also form fixed pairs.
Velvets are also monogamous. The male sits on the female until one of the two dies.
Yes, there are some animals – I mean it would be like ravens and swans – who actually have only one partner and also life-time.
Yes, there are actually species in the animal world that are monogamous, that is to say that they decide and remain true to a partner. Examples of monogamous animals are some bird species such as finches, swallows and cranes, but also some mammals such as beaver, wolves and some monkey species.
However, monogamy is not the most common form of pairing in the animal world. Many animals are polygyn (that is, a male has several females), polyandrical (a female has several males) or polygam (both females have several partners). The type of pairing depends on various factors, such as the availability of resources, the distribution area of the species and the behaviour pattern of the individuals.
very interesting. What’s this about reptiles?
Yes, there are some animals. And yes, among other things with birds, especially with swans and I also mean with penguins.
There are some monogamous species. Penguins, seahorses, crows and ravens and more or less clown fish to name a few examples.
These species differ, inter alia, from the human being that males and females are not optically different from each other.
In some animals there is the zb penguins. calibre
Although one should distinguish it from the way it is not so for everyone.
True calibre
https://www.freenet.de/lifestyle/liebe-und-partnerschaft/ver-ist-es-tiere-leben-monogamie-vor-40262406.html
white stork, bonnet diver, beaver, wolves, penguins (homosexual couples even steal the eggs of hetero), poacher swan, Albatrosse (some of them are the 50 years together), rainbow papagei, brown spinentamarine, pair-mask waffle, red panda, red fox, blue sea,
Swans stay with their chosen partner for their whole life.
https://www.br.de/radio/bayern1/ver-tiere-100.html
I think I’m in the dark.
https://www.mdr.de/brisant/vergent-monogame-tiere-100.html
Sure. storks, as far as I know, and various other species.
Animals also know monogamy. Amazing: only 2 percent of all mammals bind to life. Birds are 4 percent.
https://www.mdr.de/brisant/vergent-monogame-tiere-100.html#:~:text=Auch%20Animals%20Monogamy,but%20together%20%2D%20children%20way.
Pigeons. Someone should have said
“Maybe you should live monogam like
Pigeons and Christians…”