The findings back up similar research on the impact of male birth order. The researchers wanted to find out if birth order affected adult women's height and weight as it appears to among adult men.
They therefore drew on data from the Swedish Birth Register, which was started in 1973, and which contains information dating back to the first antenatal visit on virtually all (99 per cent) births in Sweden.
They focused on the time period 1991-2009 for women who were at least 18 years old at the time of their first pregnancy, and who had been born to a mother who was similarly at least 18 years old at the time. Twins were not included in the study.
In all, 303,301 girls were born between 1973 and 1988, who gave birth between 1991 and 2009, 206,510 of whom were first or second born.
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Of these, complete data were available for 13,406 sister pairs (just under 29,000 participants in total). The researchers wanted to look at sisters to try and take account of shared genetic and environmental influences in early life.
At birth, firstborns were very slightly lighter than their second born sisters, but as adults during their first three months of pregnancy, their BMI was marginally higher (2.4 per cent) than that of their second born sisters.
The number of children in a family was not associated with BMI or the odds of being overweight/obese, but having more siblings was associated with shorter height and lower odds of being tall, possibly attributable to the 'resource dilution hypothesis' which holds that there's less to go around as a family grows in size, suggest the researchers.
This is an observational study so no definitive conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect, and only young women were included in the study, researchers said.
The study was published in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.