According to a new study, women are more sensitive to the cold than males as a result of evolution.
Because of an in-built “evolutionary difference,” scientists have discovered that female members of species are drawn to higher temperatures.
Males favored lower temperatures than the fairer sex, according to researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel who investigated 13 bird and 18 bat species to see if they exhibited geographical distinction between the sexes.
At some periods of the year, the variances resulted in a physical separation between the animals.
“We have hypothesized that what we are dealing with is a difference between the females’ and males’ heat-sensing mechanisms, which developed over the course of evolution,” research co-author Dr. Eran Levin of the University’s School of Zoology stated.
Levin had previously observed that during the mating season, male and female animals tend to separate, with males preferring colder locations.
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