The given table delineates the population disparity of females over 100 males in six continents in 1995 and 2005.
Overall, the figure for the average number of women over 100 men underwent notable changes with Asia leading the highest women population and Europe with the lowest.
In 1995, Asian countries spearheaded their counterparts with 105.3 ratio, followed closely by Oceania with 103.9. North and Central regions of America shared same patterns at roughly 100 ratio accordingly. In contrast, Africa stood the second lowest rank with nearly 98 and Europe at the least peak of the table with respective ratio of 89.4 in the surveyed year.
In 2005, the patterns of each section shifted drastically. With Asia plummeted by 0.4 in rate, yet remained unrivaled in the whole board. The drop is the case for Oceania as the continent shrank down to 99.8 in the studied year while astill guaranteed the second leading position. In the North and Central America, the figures both regressed, with 96.9 and 97.5, respectively. Ehile the data for other four areas witnessed downward trajectory, Africa and Europe received huge upsurge during the course, occupying 99.2 and 92.8, orderly
