The word “sex” is usually associated with TV channels and web sites containing tricky content. However, in science, this term is a synonym for gender, male and female, but according to some new interpretations – gender is all those more or less expressed forms of gender ambiguity.
The emergence of gender is linked to the emergence of sexual reproduction, one of the most important moments in the evolution of the living world, and not without a reason: this process enabled gene recombination, and with that the genetic diversity in a species. Sexual reproduction allows for natural selection to occur and represents a strong evolutionary force. The oldest fossil proof of sexual reproduction comes from the Stenian era, a geological period 1.2 billion years ago, and is a specimen of a red algae species, called Bangiomorpha pubescens.
However, people have been fascinated by sexual dimorphism even in the ancient ages; the existence of the female and male sexes, which were obviously anatomically different and similar at the same time. That fascination lead the human imagination to create a being that holds the characteristics of both sexes – sexually integral, but a monstrous creature to the human race.
In ancient Greek mythology, that was Hermaphroditus, the son of Hermes and Aphrodite, which was according to Ovid, in love with the water nymph Salmacis. The love of these two godly beings was so strong that they asked the gods to unite them eternally, which eventually happened and they became one being, with two sexes. According to another ancient source, Diodorus Siculus or Diodorus of Sicily, Hermaphroditus was born with the characteristics of both sexes.
Statue of Hermaphroditus, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston |
When we speak about humans, their sex and sexuality, modern biology doesn’t support the idea of gender as pure sexual dichotomy. The development process of primary and secondary sexual characteristics has so many levels and any change in some of these phases can have dramatic consequences on the sexuality of the individual. We start life almost as hermaphrodites and only the combination of chromosomes during fertilization gives a hint of the future sex. The female sex cell holds only the X chromosome, and male sex cells can hold either X or Y. If an egg cell is fertilized by a sperm carrying the X chromosome, the XX combination determines the female sex, and if the egg cell is fertilized by a sperm carrying the Y chromosome, the XY combination determines the male sex. However, it is not all that simple. The concept of gender should be observed with care, taking into consideration all aspects of this issue. Embryology has shown that there are no significant differences in the early stages of the urinary-genital tract development. In the fifth week after fertilization, some things start to change and the beginnings of male or female sex glands (gonads) start to emerge from the same embryonic tissue. Somewhere around week 6, gonads are reprogrammed and become testicles or ovaries. If testicles are developed, they start producing sex hormones which cause the Fallopian tubes and the uterus to wither, and ductus deferens is developed. If ovaries are developed, then upon the production of estrogen ductus deferens withers. The same hormones that determine which parts will develop and which will wither, determine the development of external sex organs. However, not until puberty these organs start to direct the development of secondary sex marks – facial hair in men, breast development in women – and give the “sign” for the beginning of the final stage of sex organs development which then become functional.
The unavoidable part of the LGBTI acronym is the community of people with different sexuality from those that are considered typical sexual behaviour. Homosexuality is often described as “unnatural” and is identified with pedophilia, and the advocates of this thesis argue how homosexuality can’t be found in the animal world. However, science has documented cases of same sex intercourse in animals too. In fact, homosexual behaviours in animals is often a part of the overall sexual behaviours, which means that we’re usually talking about bisexuality in these cases.
Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), own work |
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Jelena Kalinić, MA in comparative literature and graduate biologist, science journalist and science communicator, has a WHO infodemic manager certificate and Health metrics Study design & Evidence based medicine training. Winner of the 2020 EurekaAlert (AAAS) Fellowship for Science Journalists. Short-runner, second place in the selection for European Science journalist of the year for 2022.