The Atlantic

Sexual Attraction Is the Oldest Story on Earth

When one cell drifts by another cell, pheromones fly.
Source: Smith Collection / Gado / Getty

It’s pretty hard to catch single-celled organisms in the middle of sex.

“It’s sort of like if you put a male and a female together in the zoo. You can’t necessarily get them to do the thing,” John Logsdon, an early-eukaryotic-sex expert at the University of Iowa, told me. “If you were a Martian looking down on Earth and asking if humans were sexual or not, if you couldn’t look through the windows, you’d never see humans having sex. Well, rarely.”

Lots of single-celled creatures can reproduce both asexually (cloning themselves) and sexually (combining DNA with another organism to create offspring), and they generally prefer cloning.

Really, it’s very strange that anything would have

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