Fat and fertility: Demographic implications of differential fat storage
Open Access
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 23 (S1) , 65-91
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330230506
Abstract
Anthropologists interested in human nutrition have become intrigued by the possibility of a link between nutritional status, fat stores, and fertility. Frisch (1978) and Frisch and McArthur (1974) have hypothesized such a link, based on studies of body composition at menarche and menstrual dysfunction in anorectics. This review indicates that both over- and undernutrition may interfere with reproductive function, but probably do so only when extreme. Evidence for fat as a regulator of fecundity is conflicting, and is best documented for age at puberty. Effects of fat on birth interval (a demographically more significant parameter) are confounded by the influence of lactation. A review of hormonal and metabolic patterns in obesity and inanation indicate similarities between these conditions and general or psychological stress. It is suggested that fat is better seen as an indicator of systemic function than as a single independent factor. The adaptive value of fat for human populations may lie in its ability to enhance work performance as much as in its influence on fecundity.Keywords
This publication has 87 references indexed in Scilit:
- Obesity Genes: Beneficial Effects in Heterozygous MiceScience, 1979
- Pattern of lean and fat deposition in adultsNature, 1977
- Menstrual Cycles: Fatness as a Determinant of Minimum Weight for Height Necessary for Their Maintenance or OnsetScience, 1974
- Height, Weight and Age at Menarche and the "Critical Weight" HypothesisScience, 1971
- Height and weight at menarche and a hypothesis of menarcheArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1971
- Earlier Maturation in ManScientific American, 1968
- Seasonal Hunger in a Part of the West African Savanna: A Survey of Bodyweights in Nangodi, North-East GhanaTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 1967
- A comparison of skeletal growth and maturation in undernourished and well-nourished girls before and after menarcheThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1967
- Lactation and Pregnancy: A Hypothesis1American Anthropologist, 1964
- An Examination of Fertility of Women following Pregnancy according to Height and WeightJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1957