Giraffes are gay
Giraffes in Kenya; giraffes have been called "especially gay " for engaging in male-male sexual behavior more often than male-female (heterosexual) sex. [1][2] This is a list of animals for which there is documented evidence of homosexual behavior.
Rhesus macaques, for example, were recently found to engage in same-sex mounting more frequently than they attempted to mount females, and one giraffe study found that up to 94 percent of all.
Whether described as “ritualistic jousting” or a “stately dance,” there’s something erotic going on between male giraffes.
Scientists have observed homosexual behavior in hundreds of animal species, from insects to sheep. Recently a lesbian albatross pair made headlines around the globe—the couple will be raising a chick together at New Zealand's Taiaroa Head Royal Albatross Centre.
Giraffe sex is more gay than straight. Male giraffes court each other, mount each other, and get off with other males way more frequently than they do with females—up to 90% of giraffe couplings.
List of mammals displaying homosexual behavior Giraffes in Kenya; giraffes have been called "especially gay " for engaging in male-male sexual behavior more often than male-female (heterosexual) sex. [1][2] This is a list of animals for which there is documented evidence of homosexual behavior.
But giraffes present a particularly strong rebuttal to that practice, because males don’t just sometimes neck with other males. They actually neck with males more often than females.
They swap the roles every two days." From Plenty: Bonobos, one of our closest relatives, may be the most well-known homosexual whales, bottlenose dolphins, West Indian manatees, and giraffes are known to have all-male orgies. Among black-headed gulls, scientists estimate that one in ten pairs is comprised of two females.