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In reply to the discussion: Why are males and females 50%-50%? [View all]cthulu2016
(10,960 posts)24. Very true
I really made a hash of the OP by stating the end point as the starting point. All species seem to have strategies for varying sex ratio somewhat in response to environment, but the effective ratio -- the breeding population ratio -- will tend toward 1:1.
A remarkable example of the sort of thing you're talking about is that monkeys change the sex ratio dramatically based on the size of the troop -- smaller troops can less afford to gamble on high-risk/high-reward males.
I stand corrected. Repeatedly!
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The ratio of boys to girls at birth ranges from 1.03 to 1.07 generally, depending on country
FarCenter
Feb 2012
#4
Assume there is such a thing as truly random, then random coin flips are 50% heads 50% tails.
retread
Feb 2012
#9
It's probably more complex than that, particularly in species which are polygynous and bear litters
FarCenter
Feb 2012
#20
It seems unlikely to me that a bottle-neck would lead to a change in species mating-systems
HereSince1628
Feb 2012
#22