You are what your mother eats: evidence for maternal preconception diet influencing foetal sex in humans

Author:

Mathews Fiona1,Johnson Paul J2,Neil Andrew3

Affiliation:

1. Hatherly Laboratories, School of Biosciences, University of ExeterPrince of Wales Road, Exeter EX4 4PS, UK

2. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of OxfordTubney House, Tubney, Oxon OX13 5QL, UK

3. Division of Public Health and Primary Health Care, Institute of Health Sciences, University of OxfordPO Box 777, Oxford OX3 7LF, UK

Abstract

Facultative adjustment of sex ratios by mothers occurs in some animals, and has been linked to resource availability. In mammals, the search for consistent patterns is complicated by variations in mating systems, social hierarchies and litter sizes. Humans have low fecundity, high maternal investment and a potentially high differential between the numbers of offspring produced by sons and daughters: these conditions should favour the evolution of facultative sex ratio variation. Yet little is known of natural mechanisms of sex allocation in humans. Here, using data from 740 British women who were unaware of their foetus's gender, we show that foetal sex is associated with maternal diet at conception. Fifty six per cent of women in the highest third of preconceptional energy intake bore boys, compared with 45% in the lowest third. Intakes during pregnancy were not associated with sex, suggesting that the foetus does not manipulate maternal diet. Our results support hypotheses predicting investment in costly male offspring when resources are plentiful. Dietary changes may therefore explain the falling proportion of male births in industrialized countries. The results are relevant to the current debate about the artificial selection of offspring sex in fertility treatment and commercial ‘gender clinics’.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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