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How does nature prevent incest and therefore inbreeding in animals? Without social conditioning, what happens to discourage (if not prevent) this?

• In nature, inbreeding is not always undesirable or prevented. Intensive inbreeding can in certain cases purge harmful recessive genes from a population, while ensuring that essential genes are passed on. In a sparse population, it can ensure a mate. In its most extreme form, some plants self-pollinate so intensively that outcrosses are exceptional. Conversely, many plants separate pollen production from stigma ripening to reduce self-pollination, either by wind or by pollinators. Others, such as almonds, are self-sterile, having…

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