<h3>INSECTS.</h3>
<p>In this great Class, the Lepidoptera almost alone afford means for judging of
the proportional numbers of the sexes; for they have been collected with
special care by many good observers, and have been largely bred from the egg or
caterpillar state. I had hoped that some breeders of silk-moths might have kept
an exact record, but after writing to France and Italy, and consulting various
treatises, I cannot find that this has ever been done. The general opinion
appears to be that the sexes are nearly equal, but in Italy, as I hear from
Professor Canestrini, many breeders are convinced that the females are produced
in excess. This same naturalist, however, informs me, that in the two yearly
broods of the Ailanthus silk-moth (Bombyx cynthia), the males greatly
preponderate in the first, whilst in the second the two sexes are nearly equal,
or the females rather in excess.</p>
<p>In regard to Butterflies in a state of nature, several observers have been much
struck by the apparently enormous preponderance of the males. (74. Leuckart
quotes Meinecke (Wagner, ‘Handwörterbuch der Phys.’ B. iv. 1853, s.
775) that the males of Butterflies are three or four times as numerous as the
females.) Thus Mr. Bates (75. ‘The Naturalist on the Amazons,’ vol.
ii. 1863, pp. 228, 347.), in speaking of several species, about a hundred in
number, which inhabit the upper Amazons, says that the males are much more
numerous than the females, even in the proportion of a hundred to one. In North
America, Edwards, who had great experience, estimates in the genus Papilio the
males to the females as four to one; and Mr. Walsh, who informed me of this
statement, says that with P. turnus this is certainly the case. In South
Africa, Mr. R. Trimen found the males in excess in 19 species (76. Four of
these cases are given by Mr. Trimen in his ‘Rhopalocera Africae
Australis.’); and in one of these, which swarms in open places, he
estimated the number of males as fifty to one female. With another species, in
which the males are numerous in certain localities, he collected only five
females during seven years. In the island of Bourbon, M. Maillard states that
the males of one species of Papilio are twenty times as numerous as the
females. (77. Quoted by Trimen, ‘Transactions of the Ent. Society,’
vol. v. part iv. 1866, p. 330.) Mr. Trimen informs me that as far as he has
himself seen, or heard from others, it is rare for the females of any butterfly
to exceed the males in number; but three South African species perhaps offer an
exception. Mr. Wallace (78. ‘Transactions, Linnean Society,’ vol.
xxv. p. 37.) states that the females of Ornithoptera croesus, in the Malay
archipelago, are more common and more easily caught than the males; but this is
a rare butterfly. I may here add, that in Hyperythra, a genus of moths, Guenee
says, that from four to five females are sent in collections from India for one
male.</p>
<p>When this subject of the proportional numbers of the sexes of insects was
brought before the Entomological Society (79. ‘Proceedings, Entomological
Society,’ Feb. 17, 1868.), it was generally admitted that the males of
most Lepidoptera, in the adult or imago state, are caught in greater numbers
than the females: but this fact was attributed by various observers to the more
retiring habits of the females, and to the males emerging earlier from the
cocoon. This latter circumstance is well known to occur with most Lepidoptera,
as well as with other insects. So that, as M. Personnat remarks, the males of
the domesticated Bombyx Yamamai, are useless at the beginning of the season,
and the females at the end, from the want of mates. (80. Quoted by Dr. Wallace
in ‘Proceedings, Entomological Society,’ 3rd series, vol. v. 1867,
p. 487.) I cannot, however, persuade myself that these causes suffice to
explain the great excess of males, in the above cases of certain butterflies
which are extremely common in their native countries. Mr. Stainton, who has
paid very close attention during many years to the smaller moths, informs me
that when he collected them in the imago state, he thought that the males were
ten times as numerous as the females, but that since he has reared them on a
large scale from the caterpillar state, he is convinced that the females are
the more numerous. Several entomologists concur in this view. Mr. Doubleday,
however, and some others, take an opposite view, and are convinced that they
have reared from the eggs and caterpillars a larger proportion of males than of
females.</p>
<p>Besides the more active habits of the males, their earlier emergence from the
cocoon, and in some cases their frequenting more open stations, other causes
may be assigned for an apparent or real difference in the proportional numbers
of the sexes of Lepidoptera, when captured in the imago state, and when reared
from the egg or caterpillar state. I hear from Professor Canestrini, that it is
believed by many breeders in Italy, that the female caterpillar of the
silk-moth suffers more from the recent disease than the male; and Dr.
Staudinger informs me that in rearing Lepidoptera more females die in the
cocoon than males. With many species the female caterpillar is larger than the
male, and a collector would naturally choose the finest specimens, and thus
unintentionally collect a larger number of females. Three collectors have told
me that this was their practice; but Dr. Wallace is sure that most collectors
take all the specimens which they can find of the rarer kinds, which alone are
worth the trouble of rearing. Birds when surrounded by caterpillars would
probably devour the largest; and Professor Canestrini informs me that in Italy
some breeders believe, though on insufficient evidence, that in the first
broods of the Ailanthus silk-moth, the wasps destroy a larger number of the
female than of the male caterpillars. Dr. Wallace further remarks that female
caterpillars, from being larger than the males, require more time for their
development, and consume more food and moisture: and thus they would be exposed
during a longer time to danger from ichneumons, birds, etc., and in times of
scarcity would perish in greater numbers. Hence it appears quite possible that
in a state of nature, fewer female Lepidoptera may reach maturity than males;
and for our special object we are concerned with their relative numbers at
maturity, when the sexes are ready to propagate their kind.</p>
<p>The manner in which the males of certain moths congregate in extraordinary
numbers round a single female, apparently indicates a great excess of males,
though this fact may perhaps be accounted for by the earlier emergence of the
males from their cocoons. Mr. Stainton informs me that from twelve to twenty
males, may often be seen congregated round a female Elachista rufocinerea. It
is well known that if a virgin Lasiocampa quercus or Saturnia carpini be
exposed in a cage, vast numbers of males collect round her, and if confined in
a room will even come down the chimney to her. Mr. Doubleday believes that he
has seen from fifty to a hundred males of both these species attracted in the
course of a single day by a female in confinement. In the Isle of Wight Mr.
Trimen exposed a box in which a female of the Lasiocampa had been confined on
the previous day, and five males soon endeavoured to gain admittance. In
Australia, Mr. Verreaux, having placed the female of a small Bombyx in a box in
his pocket, was followed by a crowd of males, so that about 200 entered the
house with him. (81. Blanchard, ‘Metamorphoses, Moeurs des
Insectes,’ 1868, pp. 225-226.)</p>
<p>Mr. Doubleday has called my attention to M. Staudinger’s (82.
‘Lepidopteren-Doubletten Liste,’ Berlin, No. x. 1866.) list of
Lepidoptera, which gives the prices of the males and females of 300 species or
well-marked varieties of butterflies (Rhopalocera). The prices for both sexes
of the very common species are of course the same; but in 114 of the rarer
species they differ; the males being in all cases, excepting one, the cheaper.
On an average of the prices of the 113 species, the price of the male to that
of the female is as 100 to 149; and this apparently indicates that inversely
the males exceed the females in the same proportion. About 2000 species or
varieties of moths (Heterocera) are catalogued, those with wingless females
being here excluded on account of the difference in habits between the two
sexes: of these 2000 species, 141 differ in price according to sex, the males
of 130 being cheaper, and those of only 11 being dearer than the females. The
average price of the males of the 130 species, to that of the females, is as
100 to 143. With respect to the butterflies in this priced list, Mr. Doubleday
thinks (and no man in England has had more experience), that there is nothing
in the habits of the species which can account for the difference in the prices
of the two sexes, and that it can be accounted for only by an excess in the
number of the males. But I am bound to add that Dr. Staudinger informs me, that
he is himself of a different opinion. He thinks that the less active habits of
the females and the earlier emergence of the males will account for his
collectors securing a larger number of males than of females, and consequently
for the lower prices of the former. With respect to specimens reared from the
caterpillar-state, Dr. Staudinger believes, as previously stated, that a
greater number of females than of males die whilst confined to the cocoons. He
adds that with certain species one sex seems to preponderate over the other
during certain years.</p>
<p>Of direct observations on the sexes of Lepidoptera, reared either from eggs or
caterpillars, I have received only the few following cases: (See following
table.)</p>
<p>So that in these eight lots of cocoons and eggs, males were produced in excess.
Taken together the proportion of males is as 122.7 to 100 females. But the
numbers are hardly large enough to be trustworthy.</p>
<p>On the whole, from these various sources of evidence, all pointing in the same
direction, I infer that with most species of Lepidoptera, the mature males
generally exceed the females in number, whatever the proportions may be at
their first emergence from the egg.</p>
<p>
Males Females<br/>
The Rev. J. Hellins* of Exeter reared, during<br/>
1868, imagos of 73 species, which<br/>
consisted of 153 137<br/>
<br/>
Mr. Albert Jones of Eltham reared, during<br/>
1868, imagos of 9 species, which<br/>
consisted of 159 126<br/>
<br/>
During 1869 he reared imagos from 4 species<br/>
consisting of 114 112<br/>
<br/>
Mr. Buckler of Emsworth, Hants, during 1869,<br/>
reared imagos from 74 species,<br/>
consisting of 180 169<br/>
<br/>
Dr. Wallace of Colchester reared from one<br/>
brood of Bombyx cynthia 52 48<br/>
<br/>
Dr. Wallace raised, from cocoons of Bombyx<br/>
Pernyi sent from China, during 1869 224 123<br/>
<br/>
Dr. Wallace raised, during 1868 and 1869, from<br/>
two lots of cocoons of Bombyx yamamai 52 46<br/>
<br/>
Total 934 761<br/></p>
<p>(*83. This naturalist has been so kind as to send me some results from former
years, in which the females seemed to preponderate; but so many of the figures
were estimates, that I found it impossible to tabulate them.)</p>
<p>With reference to the other Orders of insects, I have been able to collect very
little reliable information. With the stag-beetle (Lucanus cervus) “the
males appear to be much more numerous than the females”; but when, as
Cornelius remarked during 1867, an unusual number of these beetles appeared in
one part of Germany, the females appeared to exceed the males as six to one.
With one of the Elateridae, the males are said to be much more numerous than
the females, and “two or three are often found united with one female
(84. Gunther’s ‘Record of Zoological Literature,’ 1867, p.
260. On the excess of female Lucanus, ibid, p. 250. On the males of Lucanus in
England, Westwood,’ ‘Modern Classification of Insects,’ vol.
i. p. 187. On the Siagonium, ibid. p. 172.); so that here polyandry seems to
prevail.” With Siagonium (Staphylinidae), in which the males are
furnished with horns, “the females are far more numerous than the
opposite sex.” Mr. Janson stated at the Entomological Society that the
females of the bark feeding Tomicus villosus are so common as to be a plague,
whilst the males are so rare as to be hardly known.</p>
<p>It is hardly worth while saying anything about the proportion of the sexes in
certain species and even groups of insects, for the males are unknown or very
rare, and the females are parthenogenetic, that is, fertile without sexual
union; examples of this are afforded by several of the Cynipidae. (85. Walsh in
‘The American Entomologist,’ vol. i. 1869, p. 103. F. Smith,
‘Record of Zoological Lit.’ 1867, p. 328.) In all the gall-making
Cynipidae known to Mr. Walsh, the females are four or five times as numerous as
the males; and so it is, as he informs me, with the gall-making Cecidomyiidae
(Diptera). With some common species of Saw-flies (Tenthredinae) Mr. F. Smith
has reared hundreds of specimens from larvae of all sizes, but has never reared
a single male; on the other hand, Curtis says (86. ‘Farm Insects,’
pp. 45-46.), that with certain species (Athalia), bred by him, the males were
to the females as six to one; whilst exactly the reverse occurred with the
mature insects of the same species caught in the fields. In the family of bees,
Hermann Müller (87. ‘Anwendung der Darwin’schen Lehre,’ Verh.
d. n. Jahrg., xxiv.), collected a large number of specimens of many species,
and reared others from the cocoons, and counted the sexes. He found that the
males of some species greatly exceeded the females in number; in others the
reverse occurred; and in others the two sexes were nearly equal. But as in most
cases the males emerge from the cocoons before the females, they are at the
commencement of the breeding-season practically in excess. Müller also observed
that the relative number of the two sexes in some species differed much in
different localities. But as H. Müller has himself remarked to me, these
remarks must be received with some caution, as one sex might more easily escape
observation than the other. Thus his brother Fritz Müller has noticed in Brazil
that the two sexes of the same species of bee sometimes frequent different
kinds of flowers. With respect to the Orthoptera, I know hardly anything about
the relative number of the sexes: Korte (88. ‘Die Strich, Zug oder
Wanderheuschrecke,’ 1828, p. 20.), however, says that out of 500 locusts
which he examined, the males were to the females as five to six. With the
Neuroptera, Mr. Walsh states that in many, but by no means in all the species
of the Odonatous group, there is a great overplus of males: in the genus
Hetaerina, also, the males are generally at least four times as numerous as the
females. In certain species in the genus Gomphus the males are equally in
excess, whilst in two other species, the females are twice or thrice as
numerous as the males. In some European species of Psocus thousands of females
may be collected without a single male, whilst with other species of the same
genus both sexes are common. (89. ‘Observations on N. American
Neuroptera,’ by H. Hagen and B.D. Walsh, ‘Proceedings, Ent. Soc.
Philadelphia,’ Oct. 1863, pp. 168, 223, 239.) In England, Mr. MacLachlan
has captured hundreds of the female Apatania muliebris, but has never seen the
male; and of Boreus hyemalis only four or five males have been seen here. (90.
‘Proceedings, Ent. Soc. London,’ Feb. 17, 1868.) With most of these
species (excepting the Tenthredinae) there is at present no evidence that the
females are subject to parthenogenesis; and thus we see how ignorant we are of
the causes of the apparent discrepancy in the proportion of the two sexes.</p>
<p>In the other classes of the Articulata I have been able to collect still less
information. With spiders, Mr. Blackwall, who has carefully attended to this
class during many years, writes to me that the males from their more erratic
habits are more commonly seen, and therefore appear more numerous. This is
actually the case with a few species; but he mentions several species in six
genera, in which the females appear to be much more numerous than the males.
(91. Another great authority with respect to this class, Prof. Thorell of
Upsala (‘On European Spiders,’ 1869-70, part i. p. 205), speaks as
if female spiders were generally commoner than the males.) The small size of
the males in comparison with the females (a peculiarity which is sometimes
carried to an extreme degree), and their widely different appearance, may
account in some instances for their rarity in collections. (92. See, on this
subject, Mr. O.P. Cambridge, as quoted in ‘Quarterly Journal of
Science,’ 1868, page 429.)</p>
<p>Some of the lower Crustaceans are able to propagate their kind sexually, and
this will account for the extreme rarity of the males; thus von Siebold (93.
‘Beiträge zur Parthenogenesis,’ p. 174.) carefully examined no less
than 13,000 specimens of Apus from twenty-one localities, and amongst these he
found only 319 males. With some other forms (as Tanais and Cypris), as Fritz
Müller informs me, there is reason to believe that the males are much
shorter-lived than the females; and this would explain their scarcity,
supposing the two sexes to be at first equal in number. On the other hand,
Müller has invariably taken far more males than females of the Diastylidae and
of Cypridina on the shores of Brazil: thus with a species in the latter genus,
63 specimens caught the same day included 57 males; but he suggests that this
preponderance may be due to some unknown difference in the habits of the two
sexes. With one of the higher Brazilian crabs, namely a Gelasimus, Fritz Müller
found the males to be more numerous than the females. According to the large
experience of Mr. C. Spence Bate, the reverse seems to be the case with six
common British crabs, the names of which he has given me.</p>
<h3>THE PROPORTION OF THE SEXES IN RELATION TO NATURAL SELECTION.</h3>
<p>There is reason to suspect that in some cases man has by selection indirectly
influenced his own sex-producing powers. Certain women tend to produce during
their whole lives more children of one sex than of the other: and the same
holds good of many animals, for instance, cows and horses; thus Mr. Wright of
Yeldersley House informs me that one of his Arab mares, though put seven times
to different horses, produced seven fillies. Though I have very little evidence
on this head, analogy would lead to the belief, that the tendency to produce
either sex would be inherited like almost every other peculiarity, for
instance, that of producing twins; and concerning the above tendency a good
authority, Mr. J. Downing, has communicated to me facts which seem to prove
that this does occur in certain families of short-horn cattle. Col. Marshall
(94. ‘The Todas,’ 1873, pp. 100, 111, 194, 196.) has recently found
on careful examination that the Todas, a hill-tribe of India, consist of 112
males and 84 females of all ages—that is in a ratio of 133.3 males to 100
females. The Todas, who are polyandrous in their marriages, during former times
invariably practised female infanticide; but this practice has now been
discontinued for a considerable period. Of the children born within late years,
the males are more numerous than the females, in the proportion of 124 to 100.
Colonel Marshall accounts for this fact in the following ingenious manner.
“Let us for the purpose of illustration take three families as
representing an average of the entire tribe; say that one mother gives birth to
six daughters and no sons; a second mother has six sons only, whilst the third
mother has three sons and three daughters. The first mother, following the
tribal custom, destroys four daughters and preserves two. The second retains
her six sons. The third kills two daughters and keeps one, as also her three
sons. We have then from the three families, nine sons and three daughters, with
which to continue the breed. But whilst the males belong to families in which
the tendency to produce sons is great, the females are of those of a converse
inclination. Thus the bias strengthens with each generation, until, as we find,
families grow to have habitually more sons than daughters.”</p>
<p>That this result would follow from the above form of infanticide seems almost
certain; that is if we assume that a sex-producing tendency is inherited. But
as the above numbers are so extremely scanty, I have searched for additional
evidence, but cannot decide whether what I have found is trustworthy;
nevertheless the facts are, perhaps, worth giving. The Maories of New Zealand
have long practised infanticide; and Mr. Fenton (95. ‘Aboriginal
Inhabitants of New Zealand: Government Report,’ 1859, p. 36.) states that
he “has met with instances of women who have destroyed four, six, and
even seven children, mostly females. However, the universal testimony of those
best qualified to judge, is conclusive that this custom has for many years been
almost extinct. Probably the year 1835 may be named as the period of its
ceasing to exist.” Now amongst the New Zealanders, as with the Todas,
male births are considerably in excess. Mr. Fenton remarks (p. 30), “One
fact is certain, although the exact period of the commencement of this singular
condition of the disproportion of the sexes cannot be demonstratively fixed, it
is quite clear that this course of decrease was in full operation during the
years 1830 to 1844, when the non-adult population of 1844 was being produced,
and has continued with great energy up to the present time.” The
following statements are taken from Mr. Fenton (p. 26), but as the numbers are
not large, and as the census was not accurate, uniform results cannot be
expected. It should be borne in mind in this and the following cases, that the
normal state of every population is an excess of women, at least in all
civilised countries, chiefly owing to the greater mortality of the male sex
during youth, and partly to accidents of all kinds later in life. In 1858, the
native population of New Zealand was estimated as consisting of 31,667 males
and 24,303 females of all ages, that is in the ratio of 130.3 males to 100
females. But during this same year, and in certain limited districts, the
numbers were ascertained with much care, and the males of all ages were here
753 and the females 616; that is in the ratio of 122.2 males to 100 females. It
is more important for us that during this same year of 1858, the NON-ADULT
males within the same district were found to be 178, and the NON-ADULT females
142, that is in the ratio of 125.3 to 100. It may be added that in 1844, at
which period female infanticide had only lately ceased, the NON-ADULT males in
one district were 281, and the NON-ADULT females only 194, that is in the ratio
of 144.8 males to 100 females.</p>
<p>In the Sandwich Islands, the males exceed the females in number. Infanticide
was formerly practised there to a frightful extent, but was by no means
confined to female infants, as is shewn by Mr. Ellis (96. ‘Narrative of a
Tour through Hawaii,’ 1826, p. 298.), and as I have been informed by
Bishop Staley and the Rev. Mr. Coan. Nevertheless, another apparently
trustworthy writer, Mr. Jarves (97. ‘History of the Sandwich
Islands,’ 1843, p. 93.), whose observations apply to the whole
archipelago, remarks:—“Numbers of women are to be found, who
confess to the murder of from three to six or eight children,” and he
adds, “females from being considered less useful than males were more
often destroyed.” From what is known to occur in other parts of the
world, this statement is probable; but must be received with much caution. The
practice of infanticide ceased about the year 1819, when idolatry was abolished
and missionaries settled in the Islands. A careful census in 1839 of the adult
and taxable men and women in the island of Kauai and in one district of Oahu
(Jarves, p. 404), gives 4723 males and 3776 females; that is in the ratio of
125.08 to 100. At the same time the number of males under fourteen years in
Kauai and under eighteen in Oahu was 1797, and of females of the same ages
1429; and here we have the ratio of 125.75 males to 100 females.</p>
<p>In a census of all the islands in 1850 (98. This is given in the Rev. H.T.
Cheever’s ‘Life in the Sandwich Islands,’ 1851, p. 277.), the
males of all ages amount to 36,272, and the females to 33,128, or as 109.49 to
100. The males under seventeen years amounted to 10,773, and the females under
the same age to 9593, or as 112.3 to 100. From the census of 1872, the
proportion of males of all ages (including half-castes) to females, is as
125.36 to 100. It must be borne in mind that all these returns for the Sandwich
Islands give the proportion of living males to living females, and not of the
births; and judging from all civilised countries the proportion of males would
have been considerably higher if the numbers had referred to births. (99. Dr.
Coulter, in describing (‘Journal R. Geograph. Soc.’ vol. v. 1835,
p. 67) the state of California about the year 1830, says that the natives,
reclaimed by the Spanish missionaries, have nearly all perished, or are
perishing, although well treated, not driven from their native land, and kept
from the use of spirits. He attributes this, in great part, to the undoubted
fact that the men greatly exceed the women in number; but he does not know
whether this is due to a failure of female offspring, or to more females dying
during early youth. The latter alternative, according to all analogy, is very
improbable. He adds that “infanticide, properly so called, is not common,
though very frequent recourse is had to abortion.” If Dr. Coulter is
correct about infanticide, this case cannot be advanced in support of Colonel
Marshall’s view. From the rapid decrease of the reclaimed natives, we may
suspect that, as in the cases lately given, their fertility has been diminished
from changed habits of life.</p>
<p>I had hoped to gain some light on this subject from the breeding of dogs;
inasmuch as in most breeds, with the exception, perhaps, of greyhounds, many
more female puppies are destroyed than males, just as with the Toda infants.
Mr. Cupples assures me that this is usual with Scotch deer-hounds.
Unfortunately, I know nothing of the proportion of the sexes in any breed,
excepting greyhounds, and there the male births are to the females as 110.1 to
100. Now from enquiries made from many breeders, it seems that the females are
in some respects more esteemed, though otherwise troublesome; and it does not
appear that the female puppies of the best-bred dogs are systematically
destroyed more than the males, though this does sometimes take place to a
limited extent. Therefore I am unable to decide whether we can, on the above
principles, account for the preponderance of male births in greyhounds. On the
other hand, we have seen that with horses, cattle, and sheep, which are too
valuable for the young of either sex to be destroyed, if there is any
difference, the females are slightly in excess.)</p>
<p>From the several foregoing cases we have some reason to believe that
infanticide practised in the manner above explained, tends to make a
male-producing race; but I am far from supposing that this practice in the case
of man, or some analogous process with other species, has been the sole
determining cause of an excess of males. There may be some unknown law leading
to this result in decreasing races, which have already become somewhat
infertile. Besides the several causes previously alluded to, the greater
facility of parturition amongst savages, and the less consequent injury to
their male infants, would tend to increase the proportion of live-born males to
females. There does not, however, seem to be any necessary connection between
savage life and a marked excess of males; that is if we may judge by the
character of the scanty offspring of the lately existing Tasmanians and of the
crossed offspring of the Tahitians now inhabiting Norfolk Island.</p>
<p>As the males and females of many animals differ somewhat in habits and are
exposed in different degrees to danger, it is probable that in many cases, more
of one sex than of the other are habitually destroyed. But as far as I can
trace out the complication of causes, an indiscriminate though large
destruction of either sex would not tend to modify the sex-producing power of
the species. With strictly social animals, such as bees or ants, which produce
a vast number of sterile and fertile females in comparison with the males, and
to whom this preponderance is of paramount importance, we can see that those
communities would flourish best which contained females having a strong
inherited tendency to produce more and more females; and in such cases an
unequal sex-producing tendency would be ultimately gained through natural
selection. With animals living in herds or troops, in which the males come to
the front and defend the herd, as with the bisons of North America and certain
baboons, it is conceivable that a male-producing tendency might be gained by
natural selection; for the individuals of the better defended herds would leave
more numerous descendants. In the case of mankind the advantage arising from
having a preponderance of men in the tribe is supposed to be one chief cause of
the practice of female infanticide.</p>
<p>In no case, as far as we can see, would an inherited tendency to produce both
sexes in equal numbers or to produce one sex in excess, be a direct advantage
or disadvantage to certain individuals more than to others; for instance, an
individual with a tendency to produce more males than females would not succeed
better in the battle for life than an individual with an opposite tendency; and
therefore a tendency of this kind could not be gained through natural
selection. Nevertheless, there are certain animals (for instance, fishes and
cirripedes) in which two or more males appear to be necessary for the
fertilisation of the female; and the males accordingly largely preponderate,
but it is by no means obvious how this male-producing tendency could have been
acquired. I formerly thought that when a tendency to produce the two sexes in
equal numbers was advantageous to the species, it would follow from natural
selection, but I now see that the whole problem is so intricate that it is
safer to leave its solution for the future.</p>
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