4.3 Article

Life history and socioecology of infancy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume 173, Issue 4, Pages 619-629

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.24145

Keywords

allomothers; cooperative breeding; human evolution; parental investment

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences [905521]
  3. Leakey Foundation
  4. Washington State University Office of Research
  5. Washington State University, Health Equity Research Center

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Objectives Evolution of human maternal investment strategies is hypothesized to be tied to biological constraints and environmental cues. It is likely, however, that the socioecological context in which mothers' decisions are made is equally important. Yet, a lack of studies examining maternal investment from a cross-cultural, holistic approach has hindered our ability to investigate the evolution of maternal investment strategies. Here, we take a systems-level approach to study how human life history characteristics, environments, and socioecology influence maternal investment in their children. Materials and methods We test how infant age and sex, maternal age, parity, and child loss, and the composition of a child's cooperative breeding network are associated with maternal investment across three small-scale (hunter-gatherer, horticultural, and agropastoral), sub-Saharan populations (N= 212). Naturalistic behavioral observations also enable us to illustrate the breadth and depth of the human cooperative breeding system. Results Results indicate that infant age, maternal age and parity, and an infant's cooperative childcare network are significantly associated with maternal investment, controlling for population. We also find that human allomaternal care is conducted by a range of caregivers, occupying different relational, sex, and age categories. Moreover, investment by allomothers is widely distributed. Discussion Our findings illustrate the social context in which children are reared in contemporary small-scale populations, and in which they were likely reared throughout our evolutionary history. The diversity of the caregiving network, coupled with life history characteristics, is predictive of maternal investment strategies, demonstrating the importance of cooperation in the evolution of human ontogeny.

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