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[–] Vvswiftvv17 ago 

This is junky for lots of reasons. However, anyone who knows basic biology 101 knows that "having seminal fluid absorbed by other eggs" is impossible in the female human anatomy. (If you don't know this you should). Human eggs are not kept near the vaginal opening. Here is a quick animated video:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vAuJNEKpACo

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[–] Xyc0 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago  (edited ago)

This is so weird. Thanks for sharing. Curious if there's been a study for animals with longer gestational periods like felines or ferrets.

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[–] Apoplectic1 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Yeah. I doubt the gestational period of flies is that long, and depending on the time between insemination of fly A and fly B, there is a fair chance the semen may have still have been present in the female fly. If say a ferret had sex with ferret A last mating season (I'm assuming ferrets do the whole mating season thing) and then sex with ferret B last week and is impregnated with ferret B's offspring, what is the likelihood of ferret A's DNA playing a role in the offspring?