TY - JOUR T1 - Increased birth rank of homosexual males: disentangling the older brother effect and sexual antagonism hypothesis JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2022.02.22.481477 SP - 2022.02.22.481477 AU - Michel Raymond AU - Daniel Turek AU - Valerie Durand AU - Sarah Nila AU - Bambang Suryobroto AU - Julien Vadez AU - Julien Barthes AU - Menelaos Apostoulou AU - Pierre-André Crochet Y1 - 2022/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/06/26/2022.02.22.481477.abstract N2 - Male homosexual orientation remains a Darwinian paradox, as there is no consensus on its evolutionary (ultimate) determinants. One intriguing feature of homosexual men is their higher male birth rank compared to heterosexual men. This can be explained by two non-exclusive mechanisms: an antagonistic effect (AE), implying that more fertile women have a higher chance of having a homosexual son and to produce children with a higher mean birth rank, or a fraternal birth effect (FBOE), where each additional older brother increases the chances for a male embryo to develop a homosexual orientation due to an immunoreactivity process. However, there is no consensus on whether both FBOE and AE are present in human populations, or if only one of these mechanisms is at play and its effect mimicking the signature of the other mechanism. An additional sororal birth order effect (SBOE) has also recently been proposed. To clarify this situation, we developed theoretical and statistical tools to study FBOE and AE independently or in combination, taking into account all known sampling biases. These tools were applied on new individual data, and on various available published data (two individual datasets, and all relevant aggregated data). Support for FBOE was apparent in aggregated data, with the FBOE increasing linearly with fertility. The FBOE was also supported in two individual datasets. An SBOE is generated when sampling in presence of FBOE, suggesting that controlling for FBOE is required to avoid artefactual SBOE. AE was not supported in individual datasets, including the analysis of the extended maternal family. The evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. ER -