Ecological demography: A synthetic focus in evolutionary anthropology
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Evolutionary Anthropology
- Vol. 1 (5) , 177-187
- https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.1360010507
Abstract
The interests of evolutionary anthropologists, behavioral ecologists, and demographers converge on the ecology of human fertility. Ecological conditions influence the optimum pattern of maternal effort. Patterns of abortion, neglect, and infanticide vary with mothers' ability to invest in their children and children's ability to use that investment. As in most other mammals, the ecology of human fertility varies between the sexes: status and resource control are important for males, whereas reproductive value is crucial for females. In pre‐industrial societies, and even in monogamous societies in demographic transition, wealthy men had more children than did poorer men. This correlation, often assumed to have disappeared, persists today, with richer men still having more sexual access than others. Sex differences in the ecology of fertility mean that sex of the offspring, as well as birth order, influences parental investment. Because individual fertility varies with environment, it is not surprising that “natural” (uncontrolled) fertility varies across societies or that demographic transitions proceed locally, with occasional reverses, as individuals strive to maximize their lifetime reproductive success in changing, competitive, conditions.Keywords
This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resources and the life course: Patterns through the demographic transitionEthology and Sociobiology, 1992
- Reproductive success in relation to resource-access and parental age in a small Norwegian farming parish during the period 1700–1900Ethology and Sociobiology, 1992
- Fitness tradeoffs in the history and evolution of delegated mothering with special reference to wet-nursing, abandonment, and infanticideEthology and Sociobiology, 1992
- Toward an Ecological DemographyPopulation and Development Review, 1992
- Trivers‐Willard effect in contemporary North American societyAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1991
- Family Size and the Education of Children in the Context of Rapid Fertility DeclinePopulation and Development Review, 1990
- Birth Sex Ratio and Infant Mortality Rates in Captive Western Lowland GorillasFolia Primatologica, 1990
- Fertility Among Women on Welfare: Incidence and DeterminantsAmerican Sociological Review, 1989
- Reproductive success and occupational class in eighteenth‐century lancashire, EnglandBiodemography and Social Biology, 1986
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964