Publication Date:
1996
abstract:
We have chosen four Italian regions with different degrees of industrialization and socioeconomic levels to study environmental differences in the sex ratio. The improvement in living and sanitary conditions during the last century has led to a progressive reduction in early male extramortality, and the sex ratio at birth has been almost unchanged at least to the first year of life and probably up to reproductive age. To investigate whether socioeconomic, cultural, or biological factors still influence the sex ratio at birth, we studied the stillbirth rate and the relations between newborn viability and sex composition as a function of maternal age and educational level. Our results suggest that in less favorable environments early selection against male newborns is almost twice that against female newborns when the mothers are the least favored for socioeconomic status, cultural level, and biological conditions (older than 39 years).
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
secondary sex ratio; male extramortality; environmental disparity; parental education
List of contributors:
Zonta, LAURA ATTINIA; Astolfi, Paola; Ulizzi, L.
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