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Harsh environments promote alloparental care across human societies
JS. Martin, EJ. Ringen, P. Duda, AV. Jaeggi,
Jazyk angličtina Země Velká Británie
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
NLK
Free Medical Journals
od 1997 do Před 1 rokem
Freely Accessible Science Journals
od 2004 do Před 1 rokem
PubMed Central
od 1997 do Před 1 rokem
Europe PubMed Central
od 1997 do Před 1 rokem
Open Access Digital Library
od 1905-04-22
Open Access Digital Library
od 1997-01-01
PubMed
32811302
DOI
10.1098/rspb.2020.0758
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- biologická evoluce MeSH
- fylogeneze MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- sociální chování * MeSH
- životní prostředí * MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
Alloparental care is central to human life history, which integrates exceptionally short interbirth intervals and large birth size with an extended period of juvenile dependency and increased longevity. Formal models, previous comparative research, and palaeoanthropological evidence suggest that humans evolved higher levels of cooperative childcare in response to increasingly harsh environments. Although this hypothesis remains difficult to test directly, the relative importance of alloparental care varies across human societies, providing an opportunity to assess how local social and ecological factors influence the expression of this behaviour. We therefore, investigated associations between alloparental infant care and socioecology across 141 non-industrialized societies. We predicted increased alloparental care in harsher environments, due to the fitness benefits of cooperation in response to shared ecological challenges. We also predicted that starvation would decrease alloparental care, due to prohibitive energetic costs. Using Bayesian phylogenetic multilevel models, we tested these predictions while accounting for potential confounds as well as for population history. Consistent with our hypotheses, we found increased alloparental infant care in regions characterized by both reduced climate predictability and relatively lower average temperatures and precipitation. We also observed reduced alloparental care under conditions of high starvation. These results provide evidence of plasticity in human alloparenting in response to ecological contexts, comparable to previously observed patterns across avian and mammalian cooperative breeders. This suggests convergent social evolutionary processes may underlie both inter- and intraspecific variation in alloparental care.
Department of Anthropology Emory University Atlanta GA USA
Department of Zoology University of South Bohemia Ceske Budejovice Jihočeský Czechia
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
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