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Do animals know that sex leads to babies?

The time delay between sex and offspring makes identifying the cause and effect a little complicated. Humans have language to explain how reproduction works, but for other animals it may be far less clear

By Colin Barras

20 October 2023

A male lion and a cub

How did you get here?

Stu Porter/Shutterstock

The following is an extract from our nature newsletter Wild Wild Life.聽Sign up to receive it for free聽in your inbox every month.

I have only vague memories of school sex education lessons. But I鈥檓 fairly confident that at no point did it occur to me to ask a basic question: how did anyone ever figure this stuff out?

Some of our actions have near-instant consequences. Even young children learn for themselves that drinking water is a great way to quench your thirst. But sex doesn鈥檛 immediately lead to babies. It generally takes weeks to even register a pregnancy. Months pass before the act of childbirth.

In all of the world鈥檚 human societies, there is a strong understanding that sex makes babies. But it presumably required careful observation, deep thinking and an ability to reliably and accurately track the passage of time for ancient people to make the link between the two. It may also have required language so that individuals could discuss and refine their ideas.

And this brings us to non-human animals. Given that no other animal species has our capacity for language and abstract reasoning, do any of the rest of them understand where babies come from?

, a biological anthropologist at the University of Rhode Island, is convinced they don鈥檛. If she鈥檚 correct, it means we鈥檝e completely misunderstood key aspects of animal behaviour.

Consider, for instance, a situation in which a young male lion deposes the pride鈥檚 alpha male. Shortly after his victory, the new alpha may systematically kill all of the cubs in what is now 鈥渉is鈥 pride 鈥 and we think we know why. As TV documentary narrators explain, the young male is making sure that 鈥溾.

Biologists, too, sometimes use similar language. A 2016 research paper exploring male parental care among mammals states that some species 鈥 the American beaver, for example 鈥 will help care for offspring, but that such behaviour is most likely to evolve 鈥溾.

The implications here are that these animals recognise that sex leads to babies, and they have some sense of whether or not they were the progenitor of the infants they encounter.

Dunsworth has spent several years exploring why we use this sort of language when we talk about animals. Eventually, she concluded we do so simply because it is the way we, as humans, think 鈥 and we assume it鈥檚 the way non-human animals think, too. But, as she told me when I discussed the idea with her recently, there is simply no strong evidence that any other animal species understands the link between sex and babies. They lack what Dunsworth has dubbed our 鈥渞eproductive consciousness鈥.

鈥淚t鈥檚 such a profound idea that it changes everything, to my mind,鈥 says Dunsworth. Viewed this way, not only does a male lion lack the mental capacity to understand whether or not he is the father of a cub, he almost certainly does not comprehend that the world contains such a thing as 鈥渇athers鈥.

Dunsworth has written a couple of lengthy popular articles exploring the implications of her idea 鈥 鈥 but she says the feedback she has received from colleagues and from non-scientists has been mixed.

鈥淲hen you say animals don鈥檛 know that sex makes babies, people are offended on behalf of the animals of the world,鈥 she says.

Another common response from critics, says Dunsworth, is that animals must be aware of the link between sex and reproduction or they wouldn鈥檛 bother to have sex at all 鈥 and alpha males wouldn鈥檛 go to the trouble of killing infants. But she says it鈥檚 easy to come up with more neutral explanations for these behaviours.

For instance, animals with a strong sex drive are more likely to reproduce than animals with a weaker sex drive. It is not unreasonable to assume that this behavioural trait is heritable, so it鈥檚 perfectly possible for animals to have evolved an urge to have sex while possessing no understanding of the role sex plays in reproduction.

Likewise, a male lion who kills cubs shortly after he has assumed control of a pride may ultimately boost his odds of passing on his genes by doing so. This might provide enough selective pressure to favour cub-killing male lions. It鈥檚 simply not necessary for us to assume that the lion understands anything about the paternity of the cubs.

Once you adopt this line of thinking, it鈥檚 easy to come up with other ways in which animal behaviour can be misconstrued. As I鈥檓 typing, my pet cat is sitting in her cat bed and carefully washing her fur. Humans know that 鈥 but it seems unlikely that my cat grooms herself because she, too, is aware of the link.

Dunsworth鈥檚 idea raises all sorts of implications for understanding human evolution, both biological and cultural. But a point she is particularly keen to make is that her work emphasises the enormous cognitive gulf between humans and other animals. Over the past few decades, there has been a trend in science encouraging us to accept that we are nowhere near as cognitively unique as we once thought. We鈥檙e told fish seem to be able to count, monkeys are adept at using stone tools and bees can play golf.

This research has encouraged some commentators to take a dim view of our species, says Dunsworth, and claim we鈥檙e really nothing special at all. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so strange to see that idea in print,鈥 she says. Our reproductive consciousness can help us recognise just how different we are.

Dunsworth argues that doing so actually helps us better understand and appreciate non-human animals. We do them no favours by lazily anthropomorphising them. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not just furry little humans,鈥 she says. The natural world is far more interesting when we accept that it is inhabited by animals that have their own ways of thinking.

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