Abstract
SUMMARYThe weights of 44 twin foetuses, 99 triplets and 44 quadruplets, varying in gestational age from 55 to 145 days, were studied in relation to age, sex, litter size, uterine position, placental structure and weight, and ovulation rate. Triplet and quadruplet foetuses were more variable in weight, within litters, than were twins. The difference increased with foetal age and was attributed to increased competition between foetuses which were located within the same horn of the uterus. The effect was largely associated with differences in placental development, i.e. numbers of cotyledons and weight, but those differences did not entirely account for the reduction in foetal weight with increasing litter size. Differences in placental development, arising from embryo mortality, also accounted for the reduction in foetal weight when ovulation rate exceeded litter size. In contrast, differences in foetal weight associated with the sex of the foetuses were only partly mediated by differences in cotyledon weight. Foetuses in the larger litters are thus not only lighter in weight but are more variable in weight, the increased variability being controlled by events in early pregnancy.
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