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So my Keplerians have a menstrual cycle that typically lasts 45 days on average. My proposed menstrual cycle is dependent on ovulation. So multiple ovulations without a period could occur but multiple periods without ovulation would not be possible in my Keplerians, at least not normally after adolescence.

Speaking of which, here is the cycle which starts at 14 years old and continues to death:

Pre-Menstrual cycle

enter image description here

There is 1 year of cycles before menstruation happens. At this point in time, LH and FSH are the only hormones secreted. These both spike around ovulation. Breast development hasn't occurred yet, nor has estrogen or progesterone spiked up. This is simply pre-menstrual ovulation. But without the spike in female hormones or breast development, the eggs simply die after ovulation so even if a 14 year old female has sex when she ovulates, she can't get pregnant.

These amenorrheic cycles let the female know the signs of ovulation before she gets her period.

First Menstrual Cycle

enter image description here Hormones spike up and a few days later breasts start developing. A few days after that the menstrual cycle starts at the point where an egg cell is forming. The primary Oocyte, just a few hours after the oogonium goes through mitosis passes through tubes. Follicular cells are shed in these tubes and adhere to the primary Oocyte. So yes, the follicle starts forming in between ovaries.

There is no meiotic arrest. 2 days later the follicle is fully formed and meiosis starts. Over the next 3 days, meiosis is completed. After the last cytokinesis, ovulation occurs. The egg, regardless of whether it is fertilized or unfertilized, goes to the uterus and after 4 days, lodges itself in the endometrium. 18 days go by with nothing happening. Then the period starts and lasts 9 days on average. Over the 9 days after the period ends, the oogonium develops more before it goes through mitosis and the cycle starts again.

In the case that a Keplerian becomes pregnant, she could have no menstrual cycle at all for months or even years but once again, it starts at mitosis.

Anovulation and Amenorrhea

These typically go hand in hand in adults. In adolescents, this isn't always the case. Anovulatory periods(menstruation without having ovulated in that cycle) do happen and likewise amenorrheic ovulation also happens, especially near the beginning of adolescence. 25 years old is when having several of these anovulatory periods in a row becomes abnormal. Having more than 25% of the cycles within a year be anovulatory periods is also considered abnormal, regardless of how many normal cycles, missed cycles, or amenorrheic ovulations are in between these unusual cycles. From 26 years onwards, having even just 1 anovulatory period is abnormal and usually means something along the lines of an ovarian infection or other ovarian issues preventing ovulation. The only exception to this is up to several years after giving birth or several months after miscarriage when irregularity is expected.

So, is it plausible for ovulation to be so strongly correlated with menstruation that not ovulating typically means not menstruating? What would prevent this from being plausible?

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    $\begingroup$ How is this different from ordinary humans? In ordinary humans menstruation is directly caused by ovulation (when not followed by fertilization and implantation); there cannot be menstruation without ovulation, unless triggered artificially. What happens is that once an ovule is released, the ovarian follicle from which it was released transforms into a temporary endocrine gland called a corpus luteum; it secretes the progesterone which conditions the walls of the womb to accept the fertilized ovule. $\endgroup$
    – AlexP
    May 23, 2018 at 18:01
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    $\begingroup$ @AlexP - there can be anovulatory cycles $\endgroup$
    – Willk
    May 23, 2018 at 18:05
  • $\begingroup$ Yes, there can be. So I would say that menstruation causes ovulation in most cases. Especially since, before menarche in humans, there is a failed first ovulation in a lot of girls(hormones simply don't get high enough for ovulation). $\endgroup$
    – Caters
    May 23, 2018 at 18:09
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    $\begingroup$ periods starts at 14 years old and continues to death... 9 day periods...heartless much? $\endgroup$ May 23, 2018 at 18:47
  • $\begingroup$ No, I'm not. My Keplerians also don't get any more frail with age or any less fertile in terms of total pregnancy rate(miscarriage and stillbirth rate do change though) so there is no biological reason for menopause, thus the menstrual cycle until death. $\endgroup$
    – Caters
    May 23, 2018 at 19:24

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This is actually more common than the human system, humans are one of the few organisms with a "hidden" ovulation cycle that is an ovulation and "menstrual" cycle that are not completely correlated. It is believed this is to make it harder for human men to tell when a female is ovulating thus making them stick around. basically it is an adaptation to encourage pair bonding.

You may want to look up estrus in animals.

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  • $\begingroup$ "It is believed this is to make it harder for human men to tell when a female is ovulating thus making them stick around." I respect that this is only a theory, but I want proof that the liklihood of th male leaving was, in our distant past, so high and had such negative consequences and that the random mutation of a hidden cycle would result in such positive results for perpetuation of the species that... as I explain this it becomes less sensible by the second. Evolutionary genetics and psychology should never be allowed to mix. $\endgroup$
    – JBH
    May 23, 2018 at 20:08
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    $\begingroup$ well chimp males only show females any attention when they are ovulating. In bonobos who also have a hidden cycle the males spend much more time with the females, and don't show the aggression to children chimps do. So the benefit is certainly there to exploit $\endgroup$
    – John
    May 23, 2018 at 20:33

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