Abstract
In many species of monkeys and apes, sexual solicitations of males by females are more facultative and opportunistic than generally realized. Although female sexual solicitations peak at midcyle, solicitations and copulations are not necessarily confined to the days just around ovulation. Human female sexuality, and the physiological underpinnings of this sexuality evolved in prehominid contexts in which female primates solicited and copulated with multiple males on a situation-dependent basis. Such sexual behavior became increasingly costly to females in the course of hominid evolution, and women's sexuality today must be viewed as an imperfect compromise between formerly adaptive organs (such as the female clitoris) and the chronic challenges mothers face in eliciting and insuring male protection and investment in offspring.
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Hrdy, S.B. The primate origins of female sexuality, and their implications for the role of nonconceptive sex in the reproductive strategies of women. Hum. Evol. 10, 131–144 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02437536
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02437536