Proportion of males and females


In northern Europe, there are two species of flycatcher, the collared flycatcher and the pied flycatcher, that sometimes hybridize (i.e., a male from one species mates with a female from the other). Researchers investigated the sex of the offspring of such matings to test a pattern found in other birds - namely, that female hybrids are more likely to die before hatching than are male hybrids. The researchers found that of 26 hybrid offspring who made it to hatching, 16 were male. This compared with 72 males in 145 "purebred" offspring of matings between members of the same species. Is the proportion of males and females different in the purebred offspring than in the hybrid offspring? Do the appropriate hypothesis test.

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Basic Statistics: Proportion of males and females
Reference No:- TGS0734116

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