According to a study cited by Dagens Nyheter, there is a disturbing 'male' majority among museum taxidermies. This is especially true of birds, where the share of females is “merely” 40 percent.
Among mammals, though, the figures were almost equal, with females accounting for 48 percent, the study concluded after analysing some 2.5 million museum objects.
Nevertheless, according to Dagens Nyheter, this may lead to researchers having the “wrong picture” about certain species.
The unequal gender distribution is likely based on hunters' preferences rather than the curators' selection. Hunters tend to hunt males for several reasons: males are often regarded as more “impressive” due to their larger size and more colourful appearance, complete with prized trophies such as antlers. The imbalance may also be due to hunters avoiding females with young offspring due to legislation or ethical considerations.
On social media, many reacted strongly to Dagens Nyheter's awareness-raising piece, suggesting that it brought Sweden's fixation on gender issues and equality to the extreme.
“I can no longer hack it in year 2019. While normal people worry about increasing crime, the privileged left-wing liberals' main concern is unequal gender distribution among stuffed animals”, a user tweeted.
Jag orkar inte med år 2019 längre.
— Pontus Andersson (@SdPontus) 23 октября 2019 г.
Medan normala människor oroar sig över den tilltagande kriminaliteten i samhället är den ojämna könsfördelningen mellan djur på museum ett bekymmer för den privilegierade vänsterliberala klassen. https://t.co/XV1B51qN6b
“You must be joking, right?” Johan Ingerö of the Christian Democrat party tweeted. In the ensuing discussion, he also scoffed at the overly polite expression “lady animals” employed by another commentator.
Ni
— Johan Ingerö (@JohanIngero) 23 октября 2019 г.
Måste
Skämtahttps://t.co/UdzksZKQCv
“Someone obviously has far too little to do”, Åsa Tallroth of the Citizens' Coalition party tweeted.
Någon har uppenbarligen alldeles för lite att göra. pic.twitter.com/SIhfAgrSjF
— Åsa Tallroth (MED) (@asatallroth) 23 октября 2019 г.
“I believe the researchers are drawing some hasty conclusions here. Have they ever stopped to ask how the animals identify themselves or are they based on gender stereotypes?”, Alexandra Hedborg of the Moderate Party tweeted.
Jag tycker att forskarna drar lite förhastade slutsatser här. Har dom frågat vad djuren identifierar sig som eller utgår dom utifrån könsstereotypa föreställningar? 🤔https://t.co/NMbmlTqnNt
— Alexandra Hedborg (@AlexandraHedbo1) 23 октября 2019 г.
“Next alarm by the news editor: uneven gender distribution on the poultry farm”, another user sniggered.
Ojämn könsfördelning i hönsgården - nästa larm från nyhetsredaktionen?
— Staffan Gunnarson (@StaffanG_son) 23 октября 2019 г.
Sweden has long been prioritising gender equality and women's rights, to the point that it prides itself on having “the world's first feminist government”.