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Forget the Karma Sutra. When it comes to inventive sex acts, just look to the sea. There we find the elaborate mating rituals of armored lobsters, giant whales engaging in lively threesomes, and full-moon sex parties of grouper. It’s in the ocean—where sex was first invented—that reproduction may look like a handshake; an interlocking ring of individuals forming a closed loop of lovers; or perhaps a microscopic male squeezing sperm out of a hole in the top of his head while living inside his giantess mate’s kidneys. Sex in the sea is wet and wild, and each strategy is finely tuned to suit the lifestyle and location of a species. It’s a salty symphony of sex that ensures the big blue sea stays bountiful year after year…until now. Believe it or not, over the last century or so, we’ve begun to interrupt these intimate acts of the deep, with far reaching consequences not just for horny halibut, but for us as well. In this Café, we’ll talk about the weird and wild reproductive strategies of marine life and why understanding these strategies matters to us up here on land. The science of sex in the sea is exploding, and we’ll discuss how new technologies and innovations are offering insights into how we can better manage our oceans. Beyond learning a few fun, “sexsea” trivia, we’ll dive into why sex is the heart of sustainability, and how we can all play a bigger role in supporting (rather than thwarting) successful sex in the sea. |