Global warming causes an increase in female births is certainly an interesting concept
ManByTheRiver11 on
We were like gators all along?
tryingtobecheeky on
Humans are like sea turtles?
rosen380 on
Huh, I thought males giving birth was always pretty uncommon 🙂
palsh7 on
Wasn’t there just a comment or post in the past 24 hours referencing Aristotle’s theory about heat causing female births?
Milestogob4Isl33p on
Same thing happens with famine and other stressful events, like social upheaval. Male fetuses are weaker than female fetuses, and culling them early might be an evolutionary strategy.
> Observational, descriptive cross-sectional study with a duration of 3 months… Seventy-five male professional soccer players from First Division soccer teams. Offspring variables were sex of the offspring, number of children and order of birth. Exercise training variables were volume and intensity… Total offspring was 122 children (52 males (42.6%), 70 females (57.4%)). Analysis revealed that increase in either the volume (P < 0.001) or intensity (P < 0.001) of training by the players shifted the birth offspring ratio more toward females.
There has been a lot of conjecture about the effect of environmental conditions on sex ratios (either by selection vs sperm or selection vs fetuses). I don’t know if there have been any true large-scale studies on the topic though
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Global warming causes an increase in female births is certainly an interesting concept
We were like gators all along?
Humans are like sea turtles?
Huh, I thought males giving birth was always pretty uncommon 🙂
Wasn’t there just a comment or post in the past 24 hours referencing Aristotle’s theory about heat causing female births?
Same thing happens with famine and other stressful events, like social upheaval. Male fetuses are weaker than female fetuses, and culling them early might be an evolutionary strategy.
This paper has similar findings
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33006607
> Observational, descriptive cross-sectional study with a duration of 3 months… Seventy-five male professional soccer players from First Division soccer teams. Offspring variables were sex of the offspring, number of children and order of birth. Exercise training variables were volume and intensity… Total offspring was 122 children (52 males (42.6%), 70 females (57.4%)). Analysis revealed that increase in either the volume (P < 0.001) or intensity (P < 0.001) of training by the players shifted the birth offspring ratio more toward females.
There has been a lot of conjecture about the effect of environmental conditions on sex ratios (either by selection vs sperm or selection vs fetuses). I don’t know if there have been any true large-scale studies on the topic though