gynomorph
{{Short description|Organism with female traits}}
Image:Bacchus_in_Louvre_2.jpg, Roman Imperial (2nd century CE), at the Musée du Louvre.]]
Gynomorph is a word used to describe an organism with female physical characteristics.
Mythology
{{see also|LGBT themes in Greek mythology}}
In Greek mythology and religion, a gynomorph was a bi-gendered god with both masculine and feminine characteristics. Gynomorphs were portrayed as effeminate young males, like Dionysos, a masculine god who possessed distinctly feminine features. Gynomorphs retained the creative capacity of female divinities: they had cosmic wombs, but they also possessed the inseminating abilities attributed to male divinities.{{cite book|author=David Hillman|date=2014|title=Hermaphrodites, Gynomorphs and Jesus|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0aLoBAAAQBAJ|publisher=Ronin Publishing|isbn=978-1579511852}}
Biology
{{main|Sexual mimicry}}
In biology, a gynomorph is an organism with female physical characteristics, whereas an Andromorph is an organism with male physical characteristics. For instance, some female damselflies show colour variations typically found in males. Andromorphs, by resembling males, are thought to benefit from avoiding male harassment. Some authors have proposed that this benefit is offset by a higher probability of detection for andromorphs compared to gynomorphs owing to differences in body colouration.{{cite web|author1=Van Gossum, H|author2=Stoks, Robby|author3=De Bruyn, L|title=Conspicuous body coloration and predation risk in damselflies : are andromorphs easier to detect than gynomorphs?|url=https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/59554|date=July 2004}}