6/12/2004

Penguins

I believe it was the first day of class that someone stated that one of the major differences between humans and animals was the idea of trade, animals can’t do it. However, contrary to the discussion held in class I found an interesting article titled “Pick Up a Penguin” on the BBC world news page.
In this article I discovered that economics is not unique to humans; Adelie penguins on Ross Island at the South Pole were discovered participating in an economic phenomenon. Male penguins go out and collect stones and give them to the female penguins, in return the females provide sexual favors for the males. (So much for the idea that Penguins faithfully mate for life). These rocks and stones are used to make nests and are hard to come by, a limited resource that is necessary for the survival of the female’s eggs. The stones are so valuable sometimes they are even stolen from other penguins, which makes these stones and rocks very valuable and in high demand.

3 comments:

Dr. Tufte said...

This is really insightful. There's a ton of economics here.

What the penguins are doing isn't exactly trade (since the exchange of stones for sex is not direct). But it is something close called a reciprocal gift exchange (brown-nosing is an example of this). Prices are harder to quantify in such an arrangement - which explains why there isn't always an exchange, or why females do this repeatedly.

This is also an example of "the tragedy of the commons". Since no penguin owns the stones, they become hard to come by. Males are offering a solution to this problem.

And, I don't completely agree with Dr. Hunter that stones are currency, but they're pretty close. Like currency, they are small and easy to transport, and allow value to be transported. Unlike currency, they are not easily divisible, and seem to have little precautionary value if saved (since the females often settle for far fewer stones than they need).

Regarding Missy's comment, within the last decade chimpanzee males have been shown to hunt smaller monkeys, and then exchange the nutrient-rich meat for the sexual favors of females.

Dr. Tufte said...

I'm not sure that it is the behavior that is "looked down upon". Explicit and implicit courtship (e.g., marriage and dating) rituals in all human societies involve the exchange of both tangible and intangible stuff (e.g., gifts and affection). What is looked down upon by some is the application of economic principles to those sorts of exchanges. To me, this is just a good way to get students engaged in the subject. But, I do get miffed that it seems to be OK for other social sciences to apply their techniques to things like courtship.

Dr. Tufte said...

I think you're on to something Micah, the exchange here isn't quite like trade.

I still think this holds as reciprocal gift exchange though: gifts do not need to be in proportion to other gifts (although they sometimes are).

I'm also not sure that enjoyment is relevant to the exchange. Humans trade for lots of stuff that is biologically imperative, but not necessarily enjoyable in and of itself (for example, breathing clean air really doesn't offer you anything extra, but bad air is a detraction).