Gurven Michael, Walker Robert
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-3210, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2006 Apr 7;273(1588):835-41. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2005.3380.
This study investigates the consequences of the human foraging niche and multiple dependent offspring on the optimal growth trajectory of humans. We test the hypothesis that the human pattern of slow human growth between age at weaning and puberty helps defer the compound energetic demand on parents with multiple dependents, by using growth and demographic data from two foraging societies, the Ache of eastern Paraguay and the Dobe Ju/'hoansi of Botswana and Namibia. We run simulations of observed and potential growth trajectories among sub-adults and their consequent energetic demands on parents given profiles of fertility, mortality, consumption and production. We find that either sub-adult production or food subsidies from other people must substantially increase in order to compensate for the dramatic increase in energetic demand on parents if offspring were to grow faster at younger ages. Our conclusion is that slow human growth followed by a rapid adolescent growth spurt may have facilitated rising human fertility rates and greater investments in neural capital.
本研究调查了人类觅食生态位和多个受抚养后代对人类最优生长轨迹的影响。我们通过使用来自两个觅食社会(巴拉圭东部的阿奇族以及博茨瓦纳和纳米比亚的多贝·朱/霍安西族)的生长和人口数据,来检验这一假设:人类在断奶至青春期之间缓慢生长的模式有助于缓解有多个受抚养子女的父母所面临的复合能量需求。我们针对亚成年人中观察到的和潜在的生长轨迹进行模拟,并根据生育、死亡率、消费和生产情况,模拟其对父母随之产生的能量需求。我们发现,如果后代在较年轻时生长得更快,那么为了补偿父母所面临的能量需求的急剧增加,要么亚成年人的产出,要么来自他人的食物补贴必须大幅增加。我们的结论是,人类先缓慢生长,随后在青春期快速生长突增,这可能促进了人类生育率的上升以及对神经资本的更多投入。