No genetic contribution to variation in human offspring sex ratio: a total population study of 4.7 million births

Author:

Zietsch Brendan P.1ORCID,Walum Hasse23,Lichtenstein Paul4,Verweij Karin J. H.5,Kuja-Halkola Ralf4

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Evolution and Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Brisbane QLD 4072, Australia

2. Division of Microbiology and Immunology, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, 954 Gatewood Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA

3. Silvio O. Conte Center for Oxytocin and Social Cognition, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, 954 Gatewood Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA

4. Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Nobels väg 12A, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden

5. Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam UMC, location AMC, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 5, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

The ratio of males to females among an individual's offspring at birth (offspring sex ratio) has long been of great interest to evolutionary biologists. The human offspring sex ratio is around 1 : 1 and is understood primarily in terms of Fisher's principle (R. A. Fisher, The genetical theory of natural selection , 1930), which is based on the insight that in a population with an unequal sex ratio, each individual of the rarer sex will on average have greater reproductive value than each individual of the more common sex. Accordingly, individuals genetically predisposed to produce the rarer sex will tend to have greater fitness and thus genes predisposing to bearing that sex will increase in frequency until the population sex ratio approaches 1 : 1. An assumption of this perspective is that individuals' offspring sex ratio is heritable. However, the heritability in humans remains remarkably uncertain, with inconsistent findings and important power limitations of existing studies. To address this persistent uncertainty, we used data from the entire Swedish-born population born 1932 or later, including 3 543 243 individuals and their 4 753 269 children. To investigate whether offspring sex ratio is influenced by genetic variation, we tested the association between individuals' offspring's sex and their siblings' offspring's sex ( n pairs = 14 015 421). We estimated that the heritability for offspring sex ratio was zero, with an upper 95% confidence interval of 0.002, rendering Fisher's principle and several other existing hypotheses untenable as frameworks for understanding human offspring sex ratio.

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

Reference50 articles.

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4. The human sex ratio from conception to birth

5. Bull J Charnov E. 1988 How fundamental are Fisherian sex ratios? In Oxford surveys in evolutionary biology vol. 5 (eds PH Harvey L Partridge) pp. 96–135. Oxford UK: Oxford University Press.

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