Why do we have near-equal numbers of male, female babies, unlike other animals?
6 points by olvy0 8 months ago | 5 comments- 082349872349872 8 months agoIf it implies humans are unusual, this is poor framing: AIUI all the domesticated species (h sap included) have 1:1 ratios. For dairy farmers in particular, this means almost all male calves are byproducts, to be monetised somehow.
"I'll be here all week. Try the veal."
Lagniappe: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6680155/
- tuatoru 8 months agoModern humans have control over this with centrifuged, sex-selected semen for cows.
Boy (sans testicles) beef, girl milk.
- 082349872349872 8 months agoTIL! Although my neighbour still does live cover, the local semen vendor not only provides this service (~90% selected), but even has an app to calculate if the extra expense could be worth it for your dairy op: https://www.swissgenetics.com/en/selexyon-profitabiliy-calcu...
(they seem to suggest a mixed strategy could be optimal: just enough sexed straws to guarantee full replacement of the dairy herd, and normal straws for the remainder)
- 082349872349872 8 months ago
- tuatoru 8 months ago
- tuatoru 8 months agoAccording to genome studies, only about 1 man in 17 had great-great-grandchildren, back in the day.
1. https://sciencealert.com/neolithic-y-chromosome-bottleneck-w...
- beardyw 8 months agoAnd We Finally [we think we] Know Why
- beardyw 8 months ago