When you take a look at the reproductive habits of some mammals, you’ll find it is sometimes a little more interesting than the standard “birds and the bees.”
The average female human is pregnant for about 280 days and its baby is completely helpless at birth. Human babies actually remain dependent on their parents longer than any other species—mainly because our unusually large brains take years to fully develop.
A female giraffe is pregnant for about 457 days – some six months longer than a human. And when the giraffe finally does give birth, the young are so fully developed that they can walk within hours. This adaptation is common among large, hoofed plant eaters that live in open spaces and must be able to flee from predators.
A small handful of mammals, the monotremes (such as the platypus), lay eggs. This is unusual for mammals but normal for most other vertebrates.
Marsupials give birth to tiny, hairless, and immature young who further develop in their mothers’ pouch. There they continue to grow, getting nourishment by drinking milk.
For the more promiscuous side of mammals, look no further than these two: the Shaw’s jird, a small African desert rodent that can mate 224 times in two hours; and Bonobos, who engage in sexual activity numerous times a day with almost every other member of their group, male and female alike. Bonobos, by the way are the closest living relatives of humans, along with chimpanzees.