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Statistical Study Of The Sex Ratio At Birth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

W. T. Russell
Affiliation:
The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
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That the number of male births always exceeds that of females is well known to students of vital statistics, but the biological law responsible for the phenomenon has not yet been adequately determined though various theories have been offered in explanation. It has been suggested that it resulted from a high male conception rate which, although modified by an excess mortality of male embryos, nevertheless produced a masculinity of matured births. In more recent times the conclusions drawn by MacDowell & Lord (1925, 1925 a) from their experimental studies with mice have failed to support this view. They claimed that there was no correlation between the pre-natal mortality and the masculinity of live births, that the primary ratio at conception was almost identical with that at birth. These contentions were criticized by Parkes (1923, 1926), who, whilst maintaining the doctrine that the ante-natal mortality of mice “falls preponderatingly upon the males”, stated “that it is quite obvious that a great deal more information is required before any coherent story of the factors governing the sex ratio at birth in the mouse (and all other mammals) can be put together”.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1936

References

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