The 30-year-old Te Atatu mother said she would tell Kora Jade, when she was old enough to understand, that she could have been the one to tip the population to seven billion. "It's something pretty cool to look back on."
She and her partner, Rhys Peers, have two boys Cole, 8, and Tait, 1, and are very excited to be having a girl.
"So we'll have the complete set."
Ms Bowman said she was nervous about her C-section but excited to meet her daughter for the first time.
The United Nations annual report into global population said much of the increase this century is expected to come from high-fertility countries - 39 in Africa, nine in Asia, six in Oceania and four in Latin America.
Women today are having half as many children as their forbears - the global average is now down to 2.5 children per woman and that number is continuing to fall.
In the early 1950s the global average life expectancy was about 48 years, which leaped to about 68 in the first decade of this century.
Infant deaths plunged from 133 per 1000 births in the 1950s to 46 in 2010.
These huge improvements have been attributed to worldwide immunisation campaigns which greatly reduced the prevalence of childhood diseases.
MILESTONES
1804 1 billion
1927 2 billion
1959 3 billion
1974 4 billion
1987 5 billion
1999 6 billion
2011 7 billion