But, as far as total muscle mass: The human male usually has more in both measurable quantity and more as far as percentage of body weight.
The only difference is in the genital region. The muscles in this area are usually referred to as the pubococcygeus (PC) muscles. If you are asking about voluntary muscle control, both females and males have PC muscles, but by number, the female has more of them. She has muscles in her vaginal wall that are both semi-involuntarily and semi-voluntarily controlled. They can be trained to contract voluntarily (with Kegel exercises). As for the male, they have only one muscle in the PC group that the females don't have, called the cremaster. But, they of course, lack the more numerous, voluntarily controlled, vaginal muscles. The cremaster is involuntary and cannot be controlled. It functions to lift and lower the testicles for temperature control, which is essential for the production of sperm.
So, if you are asking about the most numerous muscles under voluntary control in the human body, the female would win.
Yes actually they will. As a female African grey would also be more attached to a male person. This is true with MOST birds.
At any given age, a human male is more likely to die than a human female.
Yes. A bull can run faster than a human, but a fit human, male or female, can run more miles than most other land animals.
It means that your dog needs more training.
Unito (male) Unita (female) Uniti (male or male and female, more) Unite (female, more than one)
No. Male platypuses do not stay with the female. After mating, the male has little more to do with the female.
At present there are far more male carpenters than female.
Transition from male to female is more commonly observed in the transgender community.
Yes, they develop on both. In males it is more evident as testosterone triggers more muscle growth than estrogen
male are more illiterate. for sure ;)
yes female cats shed more then male cats
female smile more