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The scientific community widely recognizes that "sex" is a complex category composed of multiple physiologies. Yet in practice, basic scientific research often treats "sex" as a single, internally consistent, and often binary variable. This practice occludes important physiological factors and processes, and thus limits the scientific value of our findings. In human-oriented biomedical research, the use of simplistic (and often binary) models of sex ignores the existence of intersex, trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming people and contributes to a medical paradigm that neglects their needs and interests. More broadly, our collective reliance on these models legitimizes a false paradigm of human biology that undergirds harmful medical practices and anti-trans political movements. Herein, we continue the conversations begun at the SBN 2022 Symposium on Hormones and Trans Health, providing guiding questions to help scientists deconstruct and rethink the use of "sex" across the stages of the scientific method. We offer these as a step toward a scientific paradigm that more accurately recognizes and represents sexed physiologies as multiple, interacting, variable, and unbounded by gendered preconceptions. We hope this paper will serve as a useful resource for scientists who seek a new paradigm for researching and understanding sexed physiologies that improves our science, widens the applicability of our findings, and deters the misuse of our research against marginalized groups.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105441 | DOI Listing |
Biol Lett
August 2025
School of Science, Technology and Engineering, The University of the Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, Australia.
The ability to unequivocally identify the sex and reproductive status of individuals is crucial across many fields of study. Recent evidence indicates that avian sex determination is more flexible than once believed, with sex-reversed individuals identified in domestic bird populations-that is, individuals exhibiting gonadal and morphological traits of one sex while possessing the chromosomal make-up of the opposite sex. The presence of these individuals can challenge the reliability of traditional sexing methods that rely solely on external morphology, internal anatomy or genetic markers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Animal Sciences, Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University, Rehovot, 7610001, Israel.
Fertilization with sex-sorted semen is the most used approach to increase the proportion of female calves in dairy farms; however, it is commonly characterized by a lower pregnancy rate. We provide new insights into embryo developmental morphokinetics following fertilization with sorted semen. We also examined whether morphokinetic parameters are sex specific and can be used to select embryos with a desired sex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheriogenology
December 2025
State Key Laboratory of Reproductive Regulation and Breeding of Grassland Livestock, College of Life Science, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot, 010021, China. Electronic address:
Sex selection is pivotal in animal husbandry and reproductive biotechnology, critical for preferential production of male beef cattle and female dairy herds. Current bovine sex selection via flow cytometry is limited by high costs, low efficiency, and sperm motility damage. This study revealed X sperm-specific Toll-like receptors 7/8 (TLR7/8) expression.
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July 2025
Sys2Diag UMR9005 CNRS/ALCEN, Cap Gamma, Parc Euromédecine, 1682 rue de la Valsière, Montpellier, 34184, CEDEX 4, France.
Despite global efforts, minimizing the culling of one-day hatched male chicks remains a critical priority in the poultry industry due to significant socio-economic concerns. To address this issue, various molecular assays have been developed for in ovo sex determination, enabling the identification and elimination of male embryos at early developmental stages. However, due to their complexity associated with ensuring high precision, the requirement for advanced infrastructures and the time-intensive nature of current methods, these assays have yet to achieve widespread commercialization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDifferential foraging by sex can have important implications for understanding the ecology of a species. This can be especially difficult to study through observations alone in sexually monomorphic species, such as the Golden-crowned Sparrow (), and for species in remote areas. We used nitrogen and carbon stable isotope analysis to determine the relative trophic position between the sexes for 73 individual Golden-crowned Sparrows, a migrant songbird species with little known diet information from remote breeding locations of Alaska and northwestern Canada.
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