4.8 Article

Grandmothering life histories and human pair bonding

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1599993112

关键词

grandmother hypothesis; human life history; human evolution; mate guarding; mating sex ratios

资金

  1. Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Research Award [DE120101113]
  2. Australian Research Council [DE120101113] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The evolution of distinctively human life history and social organization is generally attributed to paternal provisioning based on pair bonds. Here we develop an alternative argument that connects the evolution of human pair bonds to the male-biased mating sex ratios that accompanied the evolution of human life history. We simulate an agent-based model of the grandmother hypothesis, compare simulated sex ratios to data on great apes and human hunter-gatherers, and note associations between a preponderance of males and mate guarding across taxa. Then we explore a recent model that highlights the importance of mating sex ratios for differences between birds and mammals and conclude that lessons for human evolution cannot ignore mammalian reproductive constraints. In contradiction to our claim that male-biased sex ratios are characteristically human, female-biased ratios are reported in some populations. We consider the likelihood that fertile men are undercounted and conclude that the mate-guarding hypothesis for human pair bonds gains strength from explicit links with our grandmothering life history.

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