• Odd Couples

  • Extraordinary Differences Between the Sexes in the Animal Kingdom
  • By: Daphne J. Fairbairn
  • Narrated by: Kristin Kalbli
  • Length: 7 hrs and 4 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (6 ratings)

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Odd Couples  By  cover art

Odd Couples

By: Daphne J. Fairbairn
Narrated by: Kristin Kalbli
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Publisher's summary

While we joke that men are from Mars and women are from Venus, our gender differences can't compare to those of other animals. For instance: the male garden spider spontaneously dies after mating with a female more than fifty times his size. Female cichlids must guard their eggs and larvae--even from the hungry appetites of their own partners. And male blanket octopuses employ a copulatory arm longer than their own bodies to mate with females that outweigh them by four orders of magnitude. Why do these gender gulfs exist?

Introducing readers to important discoveries in animal behavior and evolution, Odd Couples explores some of the most extraordinary sexual differences in the animal world. From the fields of Spain to the deep oceans, evolutionary biologist Daphne Fairbairn uncovers the unique and bizarre characteristics--in size, behavior, ecology, and life history--that exist in these remarkable species and the special strategies they use to maximize reproductive success.

Fairbairn describes how male great bustards aggressively compete to display their gorgeous plumage and large physiques to watching, choosey females. She investigates why female elephant seals voluntarily live in harems where they are harassed constantly by eager males. And she reveals why dwarf male giant seadevils parasitically fuse to their giant female partners for life. Fairbairn also considers humans and explains that although we are keenly aware of our own sexual differences, they are unexceptional within the vast animal world. Looking at some of the most amazing creatures on the planet, Odd Couples sheds astonishing light on what it means to be male or female in the animal kingdom.

©2013 Princeton University Press (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

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Very dry but well read detail

What did you like best about Odd Couples? What did you like least?

Best: Great narrator of dry subject and detail regarding the animals, Least: Only people who love biology would be drawn to a book of this detail but paradoxically, a biologist will be familiar with the subject in most cases. I did encounter some new information. Author often waxed repetitive at the end of chapters, which were too short to need that summary repetition.

What did you like best about this story?

There were some interesting details about some species.

Which character – as performed by Kristin Kalbli – was your favorite?

Not a character. Narration of scientific research.

Was Odd Couples worth the listening time?

Yes, as I take long drives in areas with no radio reception. But there have been better Audibles to listen to.

Any additional comments?

Narrator cracked me up when she read "viscious" as "viscous" when referring to the nasty beak of the octopus. Well, maybe there was a typo in her script.

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