Homosexual behavior has now been observed in around 1,500 animal species, from insects to mammals. The male penguin couple Roy and Silo in New York’s Central Park Zoo are a famous example. They copulated, built a nest together, took care of an egg that a kindly keeper gave them (hatching it out after thirty-four days), and together looked after the baby. If a female rat develops alongside a male rat in the womb, thus being exposed to more testosterone during early development, it will mount other female rats. Two percent of oystercatchers, a monogamous bird species, form a trio of two females and a male, after which all three guard the same nest. A trio of this kind produces more offspring than a conventional pair, because they are better able to look after and protect the nest.