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Offspring Production Among the Relatives of Istmo Zapotec Men and Muxes
Ist Teil von
Archives of sexual behavior, 2020-02, Vol.49 (2), p.581-594
Ort / Verlag
New York: Springer US
Erscheinungsjahr
2020
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Male androphilia (i.e., sexual attraction toward adult males) is influenced by biological factors, reliably occurs across diverse cultures, and has persisted over evolutionary time despite the fact that it reduces reproduction. One possible solution to this evolutionary paradox is the sexually antagonistic gene hypothesis (SAGH), which states that genes associated with male androphilia reduce reproduction when present in males but increase reproduction when present in their female relatives. The present study tested the SAGH among the Istmo Zapotec—a non-Euro-American culture in Oaxaca, Mexico, where transgender and cisgender androphilic males are known as
muxe gunaa
and
muxe nguiiu
, respectively. To test the SAGH, we compared offspring production by the biological relatives of
muxe gunaa
(
n
= 115),
muxe nguiiu
(
n
= 112), and gynephilic men (i.e., cisgender males who are sexually attracted to adult females;
n
= 171). The mothers and paternal aunts of
muxe gunaa
had higher offspring production than those of
muxe nguiiu.
Additionally, the relatives of
muxe gunaa
had more offspring than those of gynephilic men, whereas no such differences were found between the families of gynephilic men and
muxe nguiiu
. Elevated reproduction by the mothers and, particularly the aunts, of
muxe gunaa
is consistent with the SAGH. However, the absence of group differences between gynephilic men and
muxe nguiiu
, and the group differences between the two types of
muxes
are not predicted by the SAGH. This is the first study to demonstrate reproductive differences between kin of transgender and cisgender androphilic males within the same non-Euro-American culture.