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If everyone wanted girls more boys might be born
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 August 2015
Extract
In the July 2011 Gazette Paseau [1] considers a population in which each birth is an independent event with probability g of being a girl and b of being a boy (b + g = 1). He supposes that, due to a preference for girls, all couples stop after producing k girls, where k is an integer greater or equal to 1. Each new birth will, even after some couples have stopped producing, still have the probability g of being a girl and b of being a boy. Paseau correctly states and shows that this will mean that the ratio
Expected number of girl births : Expected number of boy births is g : b.
So it is the same as if all couples stopped randomly. Paseau was showing that this result was a consequence of the ratio g : b always being the same for all families.
However in humans the ratio g : b is not always the same. The ratio g : b can vary significantly with many variables between couples, which influence either the ratio at conception or the subsequent implantation and survival of male or female foetuses to birth. For example, mothers whose menstrual cycles have a short follicular phase (normally days 1-14 of the 28-day cycle) tend to produce boys [2], resulting in a smaller g : b ratio. Also the timing of insemination within the menstrual cycle is associated with the gender outcome such that insemination early or late in the fertile period means that the offspring is more likely to be male; if insemination occurs in the middle it is more likely to be female [3]. It is therefore likely that changes in parental hormone concentrations during the fertile period can affect the sexes of the children [4].
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- Copyright © The Mathematical Association 2014
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