Parental investment and the optimization of human family size

Human reproductive behaviour is marked by exceptional variation at the population and individual level. Human behavioural ecologists propose adaptive hypotheses to explain this variation as shifting phenotypic optima in relation to local socioecological niches. Here we review evidence that variation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences 2011-02, Vol.366 (1563), p.333-343
Hauptverfasser: Lawson, David W., Mace, Ruth
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container_title Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences
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creator Lawson, David W.
Mace, Ruth
description Human reproductive behaviour is marked by exceptional variation at the population and individual level. Human behavioural ecologists propose adaptive hypotheses to explain this variation as shifting phenotypic optima in relation to local socioecological niches. Here we review evidence that variation in fertility (offspring number), in both traditional and modern industrialized populations, represents optimization of the life-history trade-off between reproductive rate and parental investment. While a reliance on correlational methods suggests the true costs of sibling resource competition are often poorly estimated, a range of anthropological and demographic studies confirm that parents balance family size against offspring success. Evidence of optimization is less forthcoming. Declines in fertility associated with modernization are particularly difficult to reconcile with adaptive models, because fertility limitation fails to enhance offspring reproductive success. Yet, considering alternative measures, we show that modern low fertility confers many advantages on offspring, which are probably transmitted to future generations. Evidence from populations that have undergone or initiated demographic transition indicate that these rewards to fertility limitation fall selectively on relatively wealthy individuals. The adaptive significance of modern reproductive behaviour remains difficult to evaluate, but may be best understood in response to rising investment costs of rearing socially and economically competitive offspring.
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subjects Adaptation, Biological
Children
Demographic Transition
Family Characteristics
Family size
Fertility
Fertility - physiology
Human Behavioural Ecology
Human fertility
Humans
Life History
Mortality
Parent-Child Relations
Parental Investment
Parents
Reproductive success
Sibling Competition
Siblings
Social Change
Socioeconomic Factors
title Parental investment and the optimization of human family size
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