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A Year of Wild Sex

Twelve Months of Animal Mating

An eye-opening, unexpected year of animals’ most intimate encounters.

It was a chance meeting with mating silverfish behind her bathroom cabinet that made biologist Julie Feinstein more curious about, well, the birds and the bees. How do other animals have sex? How do turtles do it? Or starfish without obvious sex organs? What about dangerous animals, like alligators? Or those historically associated with sex, like an oyster or a stork? What if all the animals that we see in zoos, TV ads, and children’s books, she wondered, had sex lives as seemingly strange as those of silverfish?

Feinstein’s humorous, accessible, and deeply researched text answers these and other questions on nature’s most surprising sexual behaviors, including firefly suitors bearing nutritious “nuptial gifts” and post-copulatory slug penis amputations. She raises an eyebrow at all the mammals—from goats to giraffes—that incorporate urine into courtship. She explains the complex interactions of amorous cockroaches and their equally complex genitalia. She laments that dyeing poison dart frog tadpoles sometimes commit cannibalism for a better shot at growing up and then, eventually, coupling up. In this little black book of animal sex, Feinstein guides readers through the year, drawing connections that illuminate the associations between animals’ mating behaviors and our monthly calendars. She details some animals’ peak bursts of activity, such as Atlantic white shrimp spawning in July, porcupines breeding in October, and bald eagles, decorators extraordinaires, working on their nests in December. Scorpions enter whimsically under the astrological sign of Scorpio in November, and when a holiday nears, she explains the mating nitty-gritty of species with deep cultural connections to a specific day, like New Year storks, Thanksgiving turkeys, or Christmas reindeer. Presenting a pair of animals for each month, Feinstein offers an entertaining and illuminating Noah’s ark and a year of wacky, unbelievable, truly wild sex.


320 pages | 10 color plates, 51 halftones | 6 x 9

Biological Sciences: Behavioral Biology, Natural History

Table of Contents

Preface: This Book Started Behind a Cabinet

January

The Scent of a Giraffe

Storks in the Snow

February

Breakfast with the Geckos

Crazy Kangaroo Junk

March

Mr. Mallard Has a Penis

Dyeing Poison Dart Frogs Are Good Parents . . . but the Kids Keep Eating Each Other

April

Spring Cleaning and the House Centipede

Look What the Alligators Are Doing! Wait. They’re Both Male?

May

Fireflies, Lightning Bugs—Neither Flies nor Bugs

Oysters Are Sexually Flexible

June

Blue Crabs Carry On

The Seahorse Is a Real Horse of a Different Color

July

Starfish Are Bendy

Shrimp Live the Fast Life

August

Red-Eared and Ready: Courtship in the Time of Invasion

Slugs. It’s Complicated.

September

Sexy Goats

Harvestmen: Secrets of the Long-Legged Lurkers

October

Porcupines, Quilled and Dangerous, Seeking ONS

Cockroaches Smell Good . . . to Each Other

November

Turkeys for Thanksgiving

Scorpions Dance

December

Bald Eagles Turn Cartwheels

Reindeer for Christmas

Final Thoughts: The Turning of the Year

Acknowledgments
Further Reading
Index 
 

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