Marriage season, promptness of successful pregnancy and first-born sex ratio in a historical natural fertility population – evidence for sex-dependent early pregnancy loss?

1998 
We investigated population-based vital records of the seventeenth and eighteenth century French Canadian population to assess the effects of marriage season on the outcome of the first births under natural fertility conditions (n=21,698 marriages). Promptness of the first successful conception after marriage differed according to marriage season; the proportion of marriages with a marriage-first birth interval of 8.0–10.0 months was lowest (34%) for marriages in August–October (P=0.001). Although the male/female sex ratio of the babies born with an interval of 8.0–10.0 months was generally higher (1.10) than those with an interval of 10.0–24.0 months (1.05), the marriages in August–October resulted in a significantly reduced sex ratio (0.96) among only the prompt conceptions (P=0.026). We discuss whether this seasonal reduction of the sex ratio could be partly explained by a clustered pregnancy loss of male zygotes in early pregnancy.
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