J. L. Brown
Emperor Mongoose
Why would I do this? Because we are not told anything much about Aslan fertility -- I am not sure there is even a canonical source on whether they usually have 'single birth' or a 'litter' -- although it seems like the fiction treats them as approximately human. Nor is there anything about 'Every Aslan female will bear a child every seventeen minutes for the hundred years in which she if fertile' -- but it seems likely that the 'actual' number will be somewhat less than that. Kings with hundreds of wives are hardly 'average', and are already counted.Really? 17 live births out of 1,000 humans and you compare that to a culture that takes multiple wives and has children with all of them, including more than one wife pregnant at one time? Your statistics are for humans that practice monogamy, not polygamy.
Human rulers with harems often had several hundred children. The only real limit seems to be economic. If they can afford that many children, they have them. Why would Aslan be any different?
We can come at this from the other direction. though -- an average human woman will give birth to 2.2 children in her lifetime; and that rate is dropping in areas with better technology. A group of ten human women will give birth to about 22 children, about 50% of each gender. That same group as Aslan females -- including the non-negligible fraction of females who decide to never take a husband -- would be producing five or six males, and sixteen or seventeen females.
The 'average male' Aslan does NOT have hundreds of wives; it would seem to be closer to three. We need to account for males who die, or fail to win enough territory or standing to take a wife at all (those make the number of females available to be wives greater) and females who go into a clan business and never marry (which makes the number of females available to be wives smaller). I am not sure how Aslan society handles unwed mothers, so I am neglecting that fraction.


