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Cricket Sets Testicle Size Record

(This story originally appeared on LiveScience.com)

A species of cricket has broken an unlikely world record: largest testicles in relation to body weight.

The Tuberous bushcricket's testicles account for 14 percent of its body weight. To put that in perspective, the testicles of a man weighing 200 pounds (91 kilograms) with that ball-to-body ratio would weigh 28 pounds (12.7 kg).

The male Tuberous bushcricket, Platycleis affinis, has testicles (shown here) that amount to 14 percent of its body weight. University of Derby.,S. Taylor

The bushcricket, whose anatomical extremes are reported in the journal Biology Letters, edges out the record of a species of fruit fly, Drosophila bifurca, whose testes to body weight ratio has been recorded as 10.6 percent.

Oddly enough, the researchers report, the cricket's large testicles don't produce greater volumes of semen per ejaculate. In fact, they produced less voluminous sperm than smaller testicles.

"Traditionally it has been pretty safe to assume that when females are promiscuous, males use monstrously-sized testicles to deliver huge numbers of sperm to swamp the competition - even in primates," study researcher James Gilbert of the University of Cambridge said in a statement. "Our study shows that we have to rethink this assumption. It looks as though the testes may be that big simply to allow males to mate repeatedly without their sperm reserves being exhausted."

The Tuberous bushcricket joins a veritable Who's-Who list of animals with strange genitalia, including:

And to round out the list, some male fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) have testes that are 2.15 percent of their body mass, whereas their brains are only 1.70 percent. [See the male fruit bat's genitalia]

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