Why Some Male Turkeys Are So Damned Sexy
Wild Turkey Vince pahkala via Wikimedia Commons It's not what you have, it's how you use it. For male wild turkeys, reproduction is an all-family effort. Less attractive males often don't get to mate, but they're still driven to ensure their genetic material is passed on. So they help their brightly colored, dominant brothers seduce hens in a process called, rather coyly, "cooperative courtship." The dominant males are more ornate, with more of the masculine traits that make the lady turkeys swoon: brightly colored heads and longer snoods (the reddish flesh that hangs over a turkey's beak). But if the subordinate turkey brothers are genetically pretty similar, what makes one more attractive than the other? According to a study in this week's PLOS Genetics, it's not the genes that matter, it's how they're expressed. Male turkey brothers duke it out for dominance during the winter before they reach sexual maturity. Whoever...