Seasonality of coitus and seasonality of birth

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Abstract

Seasonal variation of birth rates has been observed in every population in which it has been studied. Many hypotheses have been advanced to account for the variation, including seasonal variation in frequency of coitus. This relationship is known to be true for other primates, but seasonal variation in coital rate has not been previously documented in man. This paper presents over one hundred woman-years of data on coital rates from about .fifty white, mostly well-educated, premenopausal, married, husband-present volunteers. Seasonal fluctuations were seen in coital rates, of about the same magnitude as seasonal variations in the white birth rates reported for New York City, 1962-64; for the United States, 1963; and for the highest socioeconomic quintile census tracts, Baltimore, 1952-56. However, shifting the birth rates back forty weeks to approximate conception dates revealed no association with the observed coital rates. If the pattern presented has great generality, seasonal variations in births cannot be explained by seasonality of coitus. © 1967 Population Association of America.

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APA

Udry, J. R., & Morris, N. M. (1967). Seasonality of coitus and seasonality of birth. Demography, 4(2), 673–679. https://doi.org/10.2307/2060307

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