Same-sex penguin couple to raise 'genderless' chick

Wednesday, 11 September 2019 16:52 GMT

ARCHIVE PHOTO: Gentoo penguins leap out of the water in their enclosure during a media presentation at the Sea Life London Aquarium May 18, 2011. REUTERS/Andrew Winning

Image Caption and Rights Information
Rocky and Marama, who have been together for six breeding seasons, have adopted a four-month-old Gentoo chick that will be classified as neither male nor female

By Hugo Greenhalgh

LONDON, Sept 11 (Openly) - Two female penguins are set to raise the first "gender neutral" chick, a London aquarium said on Wednesday, the latest same-sex penguin parents to take a furry baby under their wings.

Rocky and Marama, who have been together for six breeding seasons, have adopted a four-month-old Gentoo chick that will be classified as neither male nor female, Sea Life London Aquarium said.

"(Our) expert care team decided that it would be normal for this chick to be identified as genderless by the team and guests rather than sticking to tradition of naming our penguins at the aquarium as a male or female," it said in a statement.

"Gender neutrality is a human construct but is completely normal in the animal kingdom."

Homosexuality in nature is relatively common, with same-sex pairings observed in beetles, dolphins and sheep among many other species.

Over the past few years, gay penguin couples at zoos in London, Berlin and New York have made global headlines, with two male penguins hatching Sea Life Sydney Aquarium's first sub-Antarctic chick, following a successful trial with a dummy egg.

Gentoo penguins share parenting and feeding responsibilities equally, so there is little difference between opposite-sex or same-sex parenting, according to animal experts.

London Zoo is currently home to three same-sex Humboldt penguin couples – two male and one female – out of a total of 95 penguins, a higher percentage than the 5% of the human population estimated to be LGBT+.

Homosexuality also occurs in other seabirds, said Viola Ross-Smith, a spokeswoman for the British Trust for Ornithology, who researched gulls as part of her PhD and has also worked as a seabird ecologist at the trust, which studies UK birds.

"I was monitoring 400 nests a year and two of them would be female-female couples; it was something you could predictably find," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In parts of the human world, gender classifications are becoming redundant with shared toilets, sexually fluid dating shows and gender-neutral birth certificates creating a more inclusive environment.

However, Sasha Dall, a behavioural ecologist at Britain's University of Exeter warned of the dangers of anthropomorphism - or ascribing human characteristics to other species.

"I don't think we can make sweeping statements," he said. "But if I had to guess, something like gender neutrality is extremely rare - if it exists." (Reporting by Hugo Greenhalgh @hugo_greenhalgh; Editing by Katy Migiro. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Openly is an initiative of the Thomson Reuters Foundation dedicated to impartial coverage of LGBT+ issues from around the world.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Themes
Update cookies preferences