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- $Unique_ID{how01078}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Descent Of Man, The
- Chapter 8.3}
- $Subtitle{}
- $Author{Darwin, Charles}
- $Affiliation{}
- $Subject{sexes
- male
- males
- life
- female
- horns
- species
- characters
- period
- sex}
- $Date{1874}
- $Log{}
- Title: Descent Of Man, The
- Book: Part II: Sexual Selection
- Author: Darwin, Charles
- Date: 1874
-
- Chapter 8.3
-
- An excellent case for investigation is afforded by the deer family. In
- all the species but one the horns are developed only in the males, though
- certainly transmitted through the females and capable of abnormal development
- in them. In the reindeer, on the other hand, the female is provided with
- horns; so that in this species the horns ought, according to our rule, to
- appear early in life, long before the two sexes are mature and have come to
- differ much in constitution. In all the other species the horns ought to
- appear later in life, which would lead to their development in that sex alone
- in which they first appeared in the progenitor of the whole family. Now in
- seven species belonging to distinct sections of the family and inhabiting
- different regions in which the stags alone bear horns, I find that the horns
- first appear at periods varying from nine months after birth in the roebuck to
- ten, twelve or even more months in the stags of the six other and larger
- species. ^471 But with the reindeer the case is widely different; for, as I
- hear from Prof. Nilsson, who kindly made special inquiries for me in Lapland,
- the horns appear in the young animals within four or five weeks after birth,
- and at the same time in both sexes. So that here we have a structure
- developed at a most unusually early age in one species of the family and
- likewise common to both sexes in this one species alone.
-
- [Footnote 471: I am much obliged to Mr. Cupples for having made inquiries for
- me in regard to the Roebuck and Red Deer of Scotland from Mr. Robertson, the
- experienced head-forester to the Marquis of Breadalbane. In regard to
- Fallow-deer, I have to thank Mr. Eyton and others for information. For the
- Cervus alces of North America, see "Land and Water," 1868, pp. 221, 254; and
- for the C. Virginianus and strongyloceros of the same continent, see J. D.
- Caton, in "Ottawa Acad. of Nat. Sc.," 1868, p. 13. For Cervus Eldi of Pegu,
- see Lieut. Beavan, "Proc. Zoolog. Soc.," 1867, p. 762.]
-
- In several kinds of antelopes only the males are provided with horns,
- while in the greater number both sexes bear horns. With respect to the period
- of development, Mr. Blyth informs me that there was at one time in the
- Zoological Gardens a young koodoo (Ant. strepsiceros) of which the males alone
- are horned, and also the young of a closely allied species, the eland (Ant.
- oreas), in which both sexes are horned. Now it is in strict conformity with
- our rule that in the young male koodoo, although ten months old, the horns
- were remarkably small, considering the size ultimately attained by them; while
- in the young male eland, although only three months old, the horns were
- already very much larger than in the koodoo. It is also a noticeable fact
- that in the prong-horned antelope ^472 only a few of the females, about one in
- five, have horns, and these are in a rudimentary state, though sometimes above
- four inches long; so that as far as concerns the possession of horns by the
- males alone, this species is in an intermediate condition and the horns do not
- appear until about five or six months after birth. Therefore in comparison
- with what little we know of the development of the horns in other antelopes
- and from what we do know with respect to the horns of deer, cattle, etc.,
- those of the prong-horned antelope appear at an intermediate period of life -
- that is not very early, as in cattle and sheep, nor very late, as in the
- larger deer and antelopes. The horns of sheep, goats and cattle which are
- well developed in both sexes, though not quite equal in size, can be felt, or
- even seen, at birth or soon afterward. ^473 Our rule, however, seems to fail
- in some breeds of sheep, for instance merinos, in which the rams alone are
- horned; for I cannot find on inquiry ^474 that the horns are developed later
- in life in this breed than in ordinary sheep in which both sexes are horned.
- But with domesticated sheep the presence or absence of horns is not a firmly
- fixed character; for a certain proportion of the merino ewes bear small horns,
- and some of the rams are hornless; and in most breeds hornless ewes are
- occasionally produced.
-
- [Footnote 472: Antilocapra Americana. I have to thank Dr. Canfield for
- information with respect to the horns of the female; see also his paper in
- "Proc. Zoolog. Soc.," 1866, p. 109. Also Owen, "Anatomy of Vertebrates," vol.
- iii, p. 627.]
-
- [Footnote 473: I have been assured that the horns of the sheep in North Wales
- can always be felt, and are sometimes even an inch in length at birth. Youatt
- says ("Cattle," 1834, p. 277), that the prominence of the frontal bone in
- cattle penetrates the cutis at birth, and that the horny matter is soon formed
- over it.]
-
- [Footnote 474: I am greatly indebted to Prof. Victor Carus for having made
- inquiries for me, from the highest authorities, with respect to the merino
- sheep of Saxony. On the Guinea coast of Africa there is, however, a breed of
- sheep in which, as with merinos, the rams alone bear horns; and Mr. Winwood
- Reade informs me that in one case observed by him, a young ram, born on Feb.
- 10th, first showed horns on March 6th, so that in this instance, in conformity
- with rule, the development of the horns occurred at a later period of life
- than in Welsh sheep, in which both sexes are horned.]
-
- Dr. W. Marshall has lately made a special study of the protuberances so
- common on the heads of birds, ^475 and he comes to the following conclusion:
- that with those species in which they are confined to the males, they are
- developed late in life; whereas with those species in which they are common to
- the two sexes, they are developed at a very early period. This is certainly a
- striking confirmation of my two laws of inheritance.
-
- [Footnote 475: "Ueber die knochermen Schadelhocker der Vogel" in the
- "Niederlandischen Archiv. fur Zoologie," Band I, Heft 2, 1872.]
-
- In most of the species of the splendid family of the pheasants, the males
- differ conspicuously from the females, and they acquire their ornaments at a
- rather late period of life. The eared pheasant (Crossoptilon auritum),
- however, offers a remarkable exception, for both sexes possess the fine caudal
- plumes, the large ear-tufts and the crimson velvet about the head; I find that
- all these characters appear very early in life in accordance with rule. The
- adult male can, however, be distinguished from the adult female by the
- presence of spurs; and, conformably with our rule, these do not begin to be
- developed before the age of six months, as I am assured by Mr. Bartlett, and
- even at this age the two sexes can hardly be distinguished. ^476 The male and
- female peacock differ conspicuously from each other in almost every part of
- their plumage, except in the elegant head-crest, which is common to both
- sexes; and this is developed very early in life, long before the other
- ornaments which are confined to the male. The wild duck offers an analogous
- case, for the beautiful green speculum on the wings is common to both sexes,
- though duller and somewhat smaller in the female, and it is developed early in
- life, while the curled tail-feathers and other ornaments of the male are
- developed later. ^477 Between such extreme cases of close sexual resemblance
- and wide dissimilarity, as those of the Crossoptilon and peacock, many
- intermediate ones could be given, in which the characters follow our two rules
- in their order of development.
-
- [Footnote 476: In the common peacock (Pavo cristatus) the male alone possesses
- spurs, while both sexes of the Java Peacock (P. muticus) offer the unusual
- case of being furnished with spurs. Hence I fully expected that in the latter
- species they would have been developed earlier in life than in the common
- peacock; but M. Hegt of Amsterdam informs me, that with young birds of the
- previous year, of both species, compared on April 23, 1869, there was no
- difference in the development of the spurs. The spurs, however, were as yet
- represented merely by slight knobs or elevations. I presume that I should
- have been informed if any difference in the rate of development had been
- observed subsequently.]
-
- [Footnote 477: In some other species of the Duck family the speculum differs
- in a greater degree in the two sexes; but I have not been able to discover
- whether its full development occurs later in life in the males of such
- species, than in the males of the common duck, as ought to be the case
- according to our rule. With the allied Mergus cucullatus we have, however, a
- case of this kind: the two sexes differ conspicuously in general plumage, and
- to a considerable degree in the speculum, which is pure white in the male and
- grayish white in the female. Now the young males at first entirely resemble
- the females, and have a grayish-white speculum, which becomes pure white at an
- earlier age than that at which the adult male acquires his other and more
- strongly-marked sexual differences: see Audubon, "Ornithological Biography,"
- vol. iii, 1835, pp. 249-250.]
-
- As most insects emerge from the pupal state in a mature condition it is
- doubtful whether the period of development can determine the transference of
- their characters to one or to both sexes. But we do not know that the colored
- scales, for instance, in two species of butterflies, in one of which the sexes
- differ in color, while in the other they are alike, are developed at the same
- relative age in the cocoon. Nor do we know whether all the scales are
- simultaneously developed on the wings of the same species of butterfly, in
- which certain colored marks are confined to one sex, while others are common
- to both sexes. A difference of this kind in the period of development is not
- so improbable as it may at first appear; for with the Orthoptera, which assume
- their adult state, not by a single metamorphosis, but by a succession of
- moults, the young males of some species at first resemble the females, and
- acquire their distinctive masculine characters only at a later moult.
- Strictly analogous cases occur at the successive moults of certain male
- crustaceans.
-
- We have as yet considered the transference of characters, relatively to
- their period of development, only in species in a natural state; we will now
- turn to domesticated animals, and first touch on monstrosities and diseases.
- The presence of supernumerary digits, and the absence of certain phalanges,
- must be determined at an early embryonic period - the tendency to profuse
- bleeding is at least congenital, as is probably color-blindness - yet these
- peculiarities, and other similar ones, are often limited in their transmission
- to one sex; so that the rule that characters, developed at an early period,
- tend to be transmitted to both sexes, here wholly fails. But this rule, as
- before remarked, does not appear to be nearly so general as the converse one,
- namely, that characters which appear late in life in one sex are transmitted
- exclusively to the same sex. From the fact of the above abnormal
- peculiarities becoming attached to one sex, long before the sexual functions
- are active, we may infer that there must be some difference between the sexes
- at an extremely early age. With respect to sexually-limited diseases we know
- too little of the period at which they originate to draw any safe conclusion.
- Gout, however, seems to fall under our rule, for it is generally caused by
- intemperance during manhood, and is transmitted from the father to his sons in
- a much more marked manner than to his daughters.
-
- In the various domestic breeds of sheep, goats, and cattle the males
- differ from their respective females in the shape or development of their
- horns, forehead, mane, dewlap, tail and hump on the shoulders; and these
- peculiarities, in accordance with our rule, are not fully developed until a
- rather late period of life. The sexes of dogs do not differ, except that in
- certain breeds, especially in the Scotch deer-hound, the male is much larger
- and heavier than the female; and, as we shall see in a future chapter, the
- male goes on increasing in size to an unusually late period of life, which,
- according to rule, will account for his increased size being transmitted to
- his male offspring alone. On the other hand, the tortoise-shell color, which
- is confined to female cats, is quite distinct at birth, and this case violates
- the rule. There is a breed of pigeons in which the males alone are streaked
- with black, and the streaks can be detected even in the nestlings; but they
- become more conspicuous at each successive moult, so that this case partly
- opposes and partly supports the rule. With the English carrier and Pouter
- pigeons, the full development of the wattle and crop occurs rather late in
- life, and conformably with the rule, these characters are transmitted in full
- perfection to the males alone. The following cases perhaps come within the
- class previously alluded to, in which both sexes have varied in the same
- manner at a rather late period of life, and have consequently transferred
- their new characters to both sexes at a corresponding late period; and if so,
- these cases are not opposed to our rule; there exist sub-breeds of the pigeon,
- described by Neumeister, ^478 in which both sexes change their color during
- two or three moults (as is likewise the case with the Almond Tumbler);
- nevertheless, these changes, though occurring rather late in life, are common
- to both sexes. One variety of the canary-bird, namely, the London Prize,
- offers a nearly analogous case.
-
- [Footnote 478: "Das Ganze der Taubenzucht," 1837, ss. 21, 24. For the case of
- the streaked pigeons, see Dr. Chapuis, "Le pigeon voyageur Belge," 1865, p.
- 87.]
-
- With the breeds of the fowl the inheritance of various characters by one
- or both sexes seems generally determined by the period at which such
- characters are developed. Thus in all the many breeds in which the adult male
- differs greatly in color from the female, as well as from the wild
- parent-species, he differs also from the young male, so that the
- newly-acquired characters must have appeared at a rather late period of life.
- On the other hand, in most of the breeds in which the two sexes resemble each
- other, the young are colored in nearly the same manner as their parents, and
- this renders it probable that their colors first appeared early in life. We
- have instances of this fact in all black and white breeds, in which the young
- and old of both sexes are alike; nor can it be maintained that there is
- something peculiar in a black or white plumage, which leads to its
- transference to both sexes; for the males alone of many natural species are
- either black or white, the females being differently colored. With the
- so-called Cuckoo sub-breeds of the fowl in which the feathers are transversely
- penciled with dark stripes, both sexes and the chickens are colored in nearly
- the same manner. The laced plumage of the Sebright bantam is the same in both
- sexes, and in the young chickens the wing-feathers are distinctly, though
- imperfectly, laced. Spangled Hamburgs, however, offer a partial exception;
- for the two sexes, though not quite alike, resemble each other more closely
- than do the sexes of the aboriginal parent-species; yet they acquire their
- characteristic plumage late in life, for the chickens are distinctly penciled.
- With respect to other characters besides color, in the wild-parent species and
- in most of the domestic breeds the males alone possess a well-developed comb;
- but in the young of the Spanish fowl it is largely developed at a very early
- age, and, in accordance with this early development in the male, it is of
- unusual size in the adult female. In the game breeds pugnacity is developed
- at a wonderfully early age, of which curious proofs could be given; and this
- character is transmitted to both sexes, so that the hens, from their extreme
- pugnacity, are now generally exhibited in separate pens. With the Polish
- breeds the bony protuberance of the skull which supports the crest is
- partially developed even before the chickens are hatched, and the crest itself
- soon begins to grow, though at first feebly; ^479 and in this breed the adults
- of both sexes are characterized by a great bony protuberance and an immense
- crest.
-
- [Footnote 479: For full particulars and references on all these points
- respecting the several breeds of the fowl, see "Variation of Animals and
- Plants under Domestication," vol. i, pp. 250, 256. In regard to the higher
- animals, the sexual differences which have arisen under domestication are
- described in the same work under the head of each species.]
-
- Finally, from what we have now seen of the relation which exists in many
- natural species and domesticated races between the period of the development
- of their characters and the manner of their transmission - for example, the
- striking fact of the early growth of the horns in the reindeer, in which both
- sexes bear horns, in comparison with their much later growth in the other
- species in which the male alone bears horns - we may conclude that one, though
- not the sole cause of characters being exclusively inherited by one sex, is
- their development at a late age. And secondly, that one, though apparently a
- less effective cause of characters being inherited by both sexes, is their
- development at an early age, while the sexes differ but little in
- constitution. It appears, however, that some difference must exist between
- the sexes even during a very early embryonic period, for characters developed
- at this age not rarely become attached to one sex.
-
- Summary and Concluding Remarks. - From the foregoing discussion on the
- various laws of inheritance we learn that the characters of the parents often,
- or even generally, tend to become developed in the offspring of the same sex,
- at the same age, and periodically at the same season of the year in which they
- first appeared in the parents. But these rules, owing to unknown causes, are
- far from being fixed. Hence, during the modification of a species the
- successive changes may readily be transmitted in different ways; some to one
- sex and some to both; some to the offspring at one age and some to the
- offspring at all ages. Not only are the laws of inheritance extremely
- complex, but so are the causes which induce and govern variability. The
- variations thus induced are preserved and accumulated by sexual selection,
- which is in itself an extremely complex affair, depending as it does on the
- ardor of love, the courage and the rivalry of the males as well as on the
- powers of perception, the taste and will of the female. Sexual selection will
- also be largely dominated by natural selection tending toward the general
- welfare of the species. Hence the manner in which the individuals of either
- or both sexes have been affected through sexual selection cannot fail to be
- complex in the highest degree.
-
- When variations occur late in life in one sex and are transmitted to the
- same sex at the same age the other sex and the young are left unmodified.
- When they occur late in life but are transmitted to both sexes at the same age
- the young alone are left unmodified. Variations, however, may occur at any
- period of life in one sex or in both, and be transmitted to both sexes at all
- ages, and then all the individuals of the species are similarly modified. In
- the following chapters it will be seen that all these cases frequently occur
- in nature.
-
- Sexual selection can never act on any animal before the age for
- reproduction arrives. From the great eagerness of the male it has generally
- acted on this sex and not on the females. The males have thus become provided
- with weapons for fighting with their rivals, with organs for discovering and
- securely holding the female and for exciting or charming her. When the sexes
- differ in these respects it is also, as we have seen, an extremely general law
- that the adult male differs more or less from the young male; and we may
- conclude from this fact that the successive variations by which the adult male
- became modified did not generally occur much before the age for reproduction.
- Whenever some or many of the variations occurred early in life the young males
- would partake more or less of the characters of the adult males; and
- differences of this kind between the old and young males may be observed in
- many species of animals.
-
- It is probable that young male animals have often tended to vary in a
- manner which would not only have been of no use to them at an early age, but
- would have been actually injurious - as by acquiring bright colors which would
- render them conspicuous to their enemies, or by acquiring structures, such as
- great horns, which would expend much vital force in their development.
- Variations of this kind occurring in the young males would almost certainly be
- eliminated through natural selection. With the adult and experienced males,
- on the other hand, the advantages derived from the acquisition of such
- characters would more than counterbalance some exposure to danger and some
- loss of vital force.
-
- As variations which give to the male a better chance of conquering other
- males or of finding, securing or charming the opposite sex would, if they
- happened to arise in the female, be of no service to her, they would not be
- preserved in her through sexual selection. We have also good evidence with
- domesticated animals that variations of all kinds are, if not carefully
- selected, soon lost through intercrossing and accidental deaths. Consequently
- in a state of nature if variations of the above kind chanced to arise in the
- female line, and to be transmitted exclusively in this line, they would be
- extremely liable to be lost. If, however, the females varied and transmitted
- their newly acquired characters to their offspring of both sexes the
- characters which were advantageous to the males would be preserved by them
- through sexual selection, and the two sexes would in consequence be modified
- in the same manner, although such characters were of no use to the females;
- but I shall hereafter have to recur to these more intricate contingencies.
- Lastly, the females may acquire and apparently have often acquired by
- transference characters from the male sex.
-
- As variations occurring late in life and transmitted to one sex alone
- have incessantly been taken advantage of and accumulated through sexual
- selection in relation to the reproduction of the species; therefore it
- appears, at first sight, an unaccountable fact that similar variations have
- not frequently been accumulated through natural selection, in relation to the
- ordinary habits of life. If this had occurred, the two sexes would often have
- been differently modified, for the sake, for instance, of capturing prey or of
- escaping from danger. Differences of this kind between the two sexes do
- occasionally occur, especially in the lower classes. But this implies that
- the two sexes follow different habits in their struggles for existence, which
- is a rare circumstance with the higher animals. The case, however, is widely
- different with the reproductive functions, in which respect the sexes
- necessarily differ. For variations in structure, which are related to these
- functions, have often proved of value to one sex, and from having arisen at a
- late period of life, have been transmitted to one sex alone; and such
- variations, thus preserved and transmitted, have given rise to secondary
- sexual characters.
-
- In the following chapters I shall treat of the secondary sexual
- characters in animals of all classes, and shall endeavor in each case to apply
- the principles explained in the present chapter. The lowest classes will
- detain us for a very short time, but the higher animals, especially birds,
- must be treated at considerable length. It should be borne in mind that for
- reasons already assigned I intend to give only a few illustrative instances of
- the innumerable structures by the aid of which the male finds the female, or,
- when found, holds her. On the other hand, all structures and instincts by the
- aid of which the male conquers other males, and by which he allures or excites
- the female, will be fully discussed, as these are in many ways the most
- interesting.
-
- Supplement On The Proportional Numbers Of The Two Sexes In Animals Belonging
- To Various Classes.
-
- As no one, as far as I can discover, has paid attention to the relative
- numbers of the two sexes throughout the animal kingdom, I will here give such
- materials as I have been able to collect, although they are extremely
- imperfect. They consist in only a few instances of actual enumeration and the
- numbers are not very large. As the proportions are known with certainty only
- in mankind, I will first give them as a standard of comparison.
-
- Man. - In England during ten years (from 1857 to 1866) the average
- number of children born alive yearly was 707, 120, in the proportion of 104.5
- males to 100 females. But in 1857 the male births throughout England were as
- 105.2, and in 1865 as 104 to 100. Looking to separate districts, in
- Buckinghamshire (where about 5,000 children are annually born) the mean
- proportion of male to female births during the whole period of the above ten
- years was as 102.8 to 100; while in N. Wales (where the average annual births
- are 12,873) it was as high as 106.2 to 100. Taking a still smaller district,
- viz., Rutlandshire (where the annual births average only 739), in 1864 the
- male births were as 114.6, and in 1862 as only 97 to 100; but even in this
- small district the average of the 7,385 births during the whole ten years was
- as 104.5 to 100; that is in the same ratio as throughout England. ^480 The
- proportions are sometimes slightly disturbed by unknown causes; thus Prof.
- Faye states "that in some districts of Norway there has been during a
- decennial period a steady deficiency of boys, while in others the opposite
- condition has existed." In France, during forty-four years, the male to the
- female births have been as 106.2 to 100; but during this period it has
- occurred five times in one department and six times in another, that the
- female births have exceeded the males. In Russia the average proportion is as
- high as 108.9, and in Philadelphia, in the United States, as 110.5 to 100.
- ^481 The average for Europe, deduced by Bickes from about 70,000,000 births,
- is 106 males to 100 females. On the other hand, with white children born at
- the Cape of Good Hope, the proportion of males is so low as to fluctuate
- during successive years between 90 and 99 males for every 100 females. It is
- a singular fact that with Jews the proportion of male births is decidedly
- large than with Christians; thus in Prussia the proportion is as 113, in
- Breslau as 114, and in Livonia as 120 to 100; the Christian births in these
- countries being the same as usual, for instance, in Livonia as 104 to 100.
- ^482
-
- [Footnote 480: "Twenty-ninth Annual Report of the Registrar-General for 1866."
- In this report (p. 12) a special decennial table is given.]
-
- [Footnote 481: For Norway and Russia, see abstract of Prof. Faye's researches
- in "British and Foreign Medico-Chirurg. Review," April, 1867, pp. 343, 345.
- For France, the "Annuaire pour l'An, 1867," p. 213. For Philadelphia, Dr.
- Stockton Hough, "Social Science Assoc.," 1874. For the Cape of Good Hope,
- Quetelet as quoted by Dr. H. H. Zouteveen in the Dutch translation of this
- work (vol. i, p. 417), where much information is given on the proportion of
- the sexes.]
-
- [Footnote 482: In regard to the Jews, see M. Thury, "La Loi de Production des
- Sexes," 1863, p. 25.]
-
- Prof. Faye remarks that "a still greater preponderance of males would be
- met with, if death struck both sexes in equal proportion in the womb and
- during birth. But the fact is, that for every 100 still-born females we have
- in several countries from 134.6 to 144.9 still-born males. During the first
- four or five years of life, also, more male children die than females, for
- example in England, during the first year, 126 boys die for every 100 girls -
- a proportion which in France is still more unfavorable." ^483 Dr. Stockton
- Hough accounts for these facts in part by the more frequent defective
- development of males than of females. We have before seen that the male sex is
- more variable in structure than the female; and variations in important organs
- would generally be injurious. But the size of the body, and especially of the
- head, being greater in male than female infants is another cause; for the
- males are thus more liable to be injured during parturition. Consequently the
- still-born males are more numerous; and as a highly competent judge, Dr.
- Crichton Browne, ^484 believes male infants often suffer in health for some
- years after birth. Owing to this excess in the death-rate of male children,
- both at birth and for some time subsequently, and owing to the exposure of
- grown men to various dangers and to their tendency to emigrate, the females in
- all old-settled countries, where statistical records have been kept, ^485 are
- found to preponderate considerably over the males.
-
- [Footnote 483: "British and Foreign Medico-Chirurg. Review," April, 1867, p.
- 343. Dr. Stark also remarks ("Tenth Annual Report of Births, Deaths, etc., in
- Scotland," 1867, p. 28) that "These examples may suffice to show that, at
- almost every stage of life, the males in Scotland have a greater liability to
- death and a higher death-rate than the females. The fact, however, of this
- peculiarity being most strongly developed at that infantile period of life
- when the dress, food and general treatment of both sexes are alike, seems to
- prove that the higher male death-rate is an impressed, natural and
- constitutional peculiarity due to sex alone."]
-
- [Footnote 484: "West Riding Lunatic Asylum Reports," vol. i, 1871, p. 8. Sir
- J. Simpson has proved that the head of the male infant exceeds that of the
- female by three-eighths of an inch in circumference and by one-eighth in
- transverse diameter. Quetelet has shown that woman is born smaller than man;
- see Dr. Duncan, "Fecundity, Fertility, Sterility," 1871, p. 382.]
-
- [Footnote 485: With the savage Guaranys of Paraguay, according to the accurate
- Azara ("Voyages dans l'Amerique merid., tom. ii, 1809, pp. 60, 179) the women
- are to the men in the proportion of 14 to 13.]
-
- It seems at first sight a mysterious fact that in different nations,
- under different conditions and climates, in Naples, Prussia, Westphalia,
- Holland, France, England and the United States, the excess of male over female
- births is less when they are illegitimate than when legitimate. ^486 This has
- been explained by different writers in many different ways, as from the
- mothers being generally young, from the large proportion of first pregnancies,
- etc. But we have seen that male infants, from the large size of their heads,
- suffer more than female infants during parturition; and as the mothers of
- illegitimate children must be more liable than other women to undergo bad
- labors, from various causes, such as attempts at concealment by tight lacing,
- hard work, distress of mind, etc., their male infants would proportionately
- suffer. And this probably is the most efficient of all the causes of the
- proportion of males to females born alive being less among illegitimate
- children than among the legitimate. With most animals the greater size of the
- adult male than of the female is due to the stronger males having conquered
- the weaker in their struggles for the possession of the females, and no doubt
- it is owing to this fact that the two sexes of at least some animals differ in
- size at birth. Thus we have the curious fact that we may attribute the more
- frequent deaths of male than female infants, especially among the
- illegitimate, at least in part to sexual selection.
-
- [Footnote 486: Babbage, "Edinburgh Journal of Science," 1829, vol. i, p. 88;
- also p. 90, on still-born children. On illegitimate children in England, see
- "Report of Registrar-General for 1866," p. 15.]
-
- It has often been supposed that the relative age of the two parents
- determines the sex of the offspring; and Prof. Leuckart ^487 has advanced what
- he considers sufficient evidence, with respect to man and certain domesticated
- animals, that this is one important though not the sole factor in the result.
- So again the period of impregnation relatively to the state of the female has
- been thought by some to be the efficient cause; but recent observations
- discountenance this belief. According to Dr. Stockton Hough, ^488 the season
- of the year, the poverty or wealth of the parents, residence in the country or
- in cities, the crossing of foreign immigrants, etc., all influence the
- proportion of the sexes. With mankind, polygamy has also been supposed to lead
- to the birth of a greater proportion of female infants; but Dr. J. Campbell
- ^489 carefully attended to this subject in the harems of Siam, and concludes
- that the proportion of male to female births is the same as from monogamous
- unions. Hardly any animal has been rendered so highly polygamous as the
- English race-horse, and we shall immediately see that his male and female
- offspring are almost exactly equal in number. I will now give the facts which
- I have collected with respect to the proportional numbers of the sexes of
- various animals; and will then briefly discuss how far selection has come into
- play in determining the result.
-
- [Footnote 487: Leuckart, in Wagner, "Handworterbuch der Phys.," B. iv, 1853,
- s. 774.]
-
- [Footnote 488: Social Science Assoc. of Philadelphia, 1874.]
-
- [Footnote 489: "Anthropological Review," April, 1870, p. 108.]
-
-