An agent-based model of coevolving lifespan and fertility termination finds that grandmother effects maintain menopause before age 50 while driving extended human longevity.
Evolutionary stability and the rarity of grandmothering
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abstract
The provision of intergenerational care, via the Grandmother Hypothesis, has been implicated in the evolution of post-fertile longevity, particularly in humans. However, if grandmothering does provide fitness benefits, a key question is why has it evolved so infrequently? We investigate this question with a combination of life-history and evolutionary game theory. We derive simple eligibility and stability thresholds, both of which must be satisfied if intergenerational care is first to evolve and then to persist in a population. As one threshold becomes easier to fulfill, the other becomes more difficult, revealing a conflict between the two. As such, we suggest that, in fact, we should expect the evolution of grandmothering to be rare.
fields
q-bio.PE 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Why does women's fertility end in mid-life? Grandmothering and age at last birth
An agent-based model of coevolving lifespan and fertility termination finds that grandmother effects maintain menopause before age 50 while driving extended human longevity.