With the appearance of spring, I have been noticing new couples and flirtations come alive after being dormant in the gloomy days of winter. When out with my girlfriend and her new beau last night, it was all the more apparent as the third wheel! This is not the first time that during this time of year, I've noticed an increased flirtation and coupling among my friends and I do wonder if there is an evolutionary reason for the heightened activity.
The woman who could probably give me a definitive answer is evolutionary biologist and award winning science journalist, Olivia Judson. Her first book was entitled Dr. Tatiana's Sex Advice to all Creation. It uses a playful literary tool to elucidate the evolutionary components of sex. The book sets up the chapters as advice columns. One such insect from the book complains:
"Dear Dr. Tatiana - My name's Twiggy and I'm a stick insect. It's with great embarrassment that I write to you while copulating, but my mate and I have been copulating for ten weeks already. I am bored out of my skull, but he shows no signs of flagging. He says it's because he's madly in love with me, but I think he's just plain mad. How can I get him to quit? - Sick of Sex in India".*
By anthropomorphizing animals and posing questions as a catalyst, Judson is able to fuel a fascinating outlet to dive into some of the racier sides of sex and really investigate the evolutionary reasons why they exist. No rock is unturned throughout the book. Frustrated birds, mammals, insects, reptiles, and bacteria write in and reveal quite startling behavior. The prologue of the book asserts that:
"Dr. Tatiana's Sex Advice to all Creation is a unique guidebook to sex. It reveals, for example when necrophilia is acceptable, and who should commit bestiality with whom. It discloses the best time to have a sex change, how to have a virgin birth, and when to eat your lover. It also advises on more mundane matters - such as male pregnancy and the joys of a detachable penis."**