II.—Prenatal Death in the Pig and its Effect upon the Sex-Ratio
- 1 January 1927
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 46, 9-14
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0370164600021842
Abstract
The cytological evidence concerning the pig is that the sex of the future individual is determined at the time of fertilisation, and that in respect of the elements of the sex-chromosome sex-determining mechanism the male is digametic. If this is so, if the two sorts of sperm are produced in equal numbers, if each kind is equally viable and functional, and if fertilisation is at random, then a primary sex-ratio (that which obtains at the time of conception) of equality must follow. If male and female zygotes are equally viable, then the secondary sex-ratio (that which obtains at the time of gestation) will also be equality. A secondary sex-ratio other than equality must be the reflection of an unequal primary sex-ratio, the result of a differential production of the two sorts of gametes elaborated by the digametic sex, of a selective fertilisation by these, or of a sexually selective mortality among the embryos or/and fœtuses. A secondary sex-ratio of equality can follow a pronounced inequality in the primary sex-ratio if a sexually selective mortality operates prenatally.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies on the sex-ratio and related phenomena. (7) The foetal sex-ratio in the pigThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1925
- STUDIES ON THE SEX-RATIO AND RELATED PHENOMENABiometrika, 1923
- The problem of embryonic pathology in mammals, with observations upon intrauterine mortality in the pigJournal of Anatomy, 1923
- Further observations on the factors controlling fertility and foetal atrophyThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1921
- On the Size of Litters and the Number of Nipples in SwineProceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1913