if an animal was completely homosexual, wouldn't the allele have disappeared a long time ago?
by Anonymous13 years ago
why wouldn't that apply to humans?
by Anonymous13 years ago
I'm not sure... there is incomplete dominance but then the population of bisexuals would be much higher.
by Anonymous13 years ago
that doesn't account for the number of bisexuals who refuse to believe they are. Plus people aren't divided into straight, gay, and bisexual. It's probably a polygenic trait like skin color, if it's even genetically determined.
by Anonymous13 years ago
genetically speaking, (if Homosexuality is inherited), people are divided into straight, gay, and bisexual (assuming it is incomplete or polygenic); however, if it were incomplete, a large portion of the world would be bisexual. It's too hard to believe that there is such a large portion of closeted bisexuals.
by Anonymous13 years ago
well people usually deny it. They brush it off as something else. Bisexuality is a vary large vague region, so just because you like girls more than guys (and you're a guy) doesn't mean you are technically completely straight. Most guys would self-identify as straight if that was the case though.
by Anonymous13 years ago
Because they can't have babies with each other if they are both the same gender, so the allele would not be passed on by them, but by the heterosexual carriers of that allele (the parents, siblings, etc).
by Anonymous11 years ago
I caught my two male tortoises (brothers) mating... it was really creepy.
by Anonymous13 years ago
I had two male cats who were gay. They were also twin brothers. Gay twincest cats.
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 11 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 11 years ago