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  2. Human mating strategies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_mating_strategies

    In evolutionary psychology and behavioral ecology, human mating strategies are a set of behaviors used by individuals to select, attract, and retain mates.Mating strategies overlap with reproductive strategies, which encompass a broader set of behaviors involving the timing of reproduction and the trade-off between quantity and quality of offspring.

  3. Penile–vaginal intercourse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penile–vaginal_intercourse

    Processes in the human biological life cycle: 1. maturity; 2. spermatogenesis and oogenesis; 3. vaginal intercourse with internal fertilization; 4. zygote; 5. embryonic development; 6. childbirth; 7. adolescence. The desire for sensual pleasure is usually the main motivation for humans, and sometimes the wish to have a baby or more children.

  4. Mating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mating

    The human practice of mating and artificially inseminating domesticated animals is part of animal husbandry. In some terrestrial arthropods , including insects representing basal (primitive) phylogenetic clades, the male deposits spermatozoa on the substrate, sometimes stored within a special structure.

  5. Yes, some animals can have babies without a mate. Here's how

    www.aol.com/news/yes-animals-babies-without-mate...

    A boa constrictor in the U.K. gave birth to 14 babies — without a mate. The process is called parthenogenesis, from the Greek words for “virgin” and “birth.” It tends to occur in ...

  6. Sexual mimicry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_mimicry

    Sexual mimicry is also used as a mate-guarding strategy by some species. Mate-guarding is a process in which a member of a species prevents another member of the same species from mating with their partner. Mate-guarding is seen in Cotesia rubecula, a parasitic wasp from the family Braconidae whose mating system is polygynous. Males are ...

  7. Animal sexual behaviour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_sexual_behaviour

    Analysis of animal genes found evidence that, after humans had diverged from other apes, interspecies mating nonetheless occurred regularly enough to change certain genes in the new gene pool. [163] Researchers found that the X chromosomes of humans and chimps may have diverged around 1.2 million years after the other chromosomes.

  8. Category:Mating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mating

    The articles in this category are primarily about mating in animals, although a few of them (such as mating in yeast and mating in fungi) are about other types of organisms. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mating .

  9. The Most Common Sexual Fantasies and How to Fulfill ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/most-common-sexual-fantasies-fulfill...

    Whether we want to admit it or not, most everyone has had at least one sexual fantasy—and contrary to what societal norms say, the imagination game is routine human behavior.