Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of mother's age and parity on the prenatal allocation of resources in sons and daughters using a sample of 6994 in 20- to 34-year-old mothers from Granada (Spain). This study tests the Trivers–Willard allocation model, which predicts that, depending on the mother's condition, there can be a bias from 50/50 expected investment in the sexes. The results show that mothers of 25–29 age class produce relatively heavier sons compared to younger mothers, suggesting a bias in the allocation of resources before birth favoring neonate boys. This extra investment in boys appears to be related more to the mother's age than to her parity. Offspring of multiparous mothers had shorter gestation length, but multiparous mothers of the 25–29 age class had boys with a longer gestation than the younger ones. The 25–29 age class mothers are in the peak of fertility and they are presumably in better condition than the other mothers in the study sample. The results suggest that Granada women performed a sex-biased prenatal investment favoring sons by prolonging the gestation period. An index of boys' extra birth weight is proposed as a suitable variable to measure the maternal prenatal investment.
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Braza, F. Human Prenatal Investment Affected by Maternal Age and Parity. Human Ecology 32, 163–175 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1023/B:HUEC.0000019761.98723.af
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/B:HUEC.0000019761.98723.af