Last time I checked …

Filed under: newsworthy — admin at 10:09 am on Friday, April 25, 2008

Mother’s diet can help determine sex of child: study  

PARIS (AFP) – Oysters may excite the libido, but there is nothing like a hearty breakfast laced with sugar to boost a woman’s chances of conceiving a son, according to a study released Wednesday.

Likewise, a low-energy diet that skimps on calories, minerals and nutrients is more likely to yield a female of the human species, says the study, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, Britain’s de facto academy of sciences.

Fiona Mathews of the University of Exeter in Britain and colleagues wanted to find out if a woman’s diet has an impact on the sex of her offspring.

So they asked 740 first-time mothers who did not know if their unborn foetuses were male or female to provide detailed records of eating habits before and after they became pregnant. The women were split into three groups according to the number calories they consumed per day around the time of conception.

Fifty-six percent of the women in the group with the highest energy intake had sons, compared to 45 percent in the least-well fed cohort.

Beside racking up a higher calorie count, the group who produced more males were also more likely to have eaten a wider range of nutrients, including potassium, calcium and vitamins C, E and B12.

The odds of an XY, or male outcome to a pregnancy also went up sharply “for women who consumed at least one bowl of breakfast cereal daily compared with those who ate less than or equal to one bowl of week,” the study reported.

These surprising findings are consistent with a very gradual shift in favor of girls over the last four decades in the sex ratio of newborns, according to the researchers.

Previous research has shown — despite the rising epidemic in obesity — a reduction in the average energy uptake in advanced economies. The number of adults who skip breakfast has also increased substantially.

“This research may help to explain why in developed countries, where many young women choose low calorie diets, the proportion of boys is falling,” Mathews said.

The study’s findings, she added, could point to a “natural mechanism” for gender selection.

The link between a rich diet and male children may have an evolutionary explanation.

http://health.yahoo.com/news/afp/healthdietsexchildren_080423003240.html

The last time I checked, the reason a boy is an XY is because the father gives the Y. This study shows that 56% of “well-fed” women had boys while only 44% had girls. Meanwhile only 45% of the “least-well-fed” women had boys while the other 55% had girls. According to the study, women MAY be able to help determine the sex of their child with their diet. I think that it just shows that women who had heavier diets happened to have boys 56% of the time.

I’m gonna go with the old fashioned X and Y.

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