Sear Rebecca
Department of Social Policy, London School of Economics, London, UK.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2007 Apr;132(4):632-41. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20558.
Life history theory predicts that where resources are limited, investment in reproduction will cause a decline in body condition and ultimately may lower survival rates. We investigate the relationship between reproduction and mortality in women in rural Gambia. We use a number of different measures of reproductive investment: the timing of reproduction, intensity of reproduction, and cumulative reproductive investment (parity). Though giving birth is clearly a risk factor for increased mortality, we find limited evidence that the timing, intensity, or cumulative effects of reproduction have a survival cost. Instead, there is some evidence that women who have invested heavily in reproduction have higher survival than women with lower reproductive investment: both high parity and late age at last reproduction are associated with high survival. The only evidence for any cost of reproduction is that women who have given birth to twins (considered a marker of heavy investment in reproduction) have higher mortality rates than other women, after the age of 50 years. A potential confounding factor may be differences in health between women: particularly healthy women may be able to invest substantially in both reproduction and their own survival, leading to the positive correlations between survival and both parity and age at last birth we observe. To control for differences in health between women, we reanalyze the relationship between reproduction and mortality but include variables correlating with health in our models (height, BMI, and hemoglobin). Even when controlling for health, the positive correlation between investment in reproduction and survival remains unchanged.
生活史理论预测,在资源有限的情况下,对繁殖的投入会导致身体状况下降,并最终可能降低存活率。我们调查了冈比亚农村地区女性繁殖与死亡率之间的关系。我们使用了多种不同的繁殖投入衡量指标:繁殖时间、繁殖强度和累积繁殖投入(产次)。尽管分娩显然是死亡率上升的一个风险因素,但我们发现,关于繁殖的时间、强度或累积效应会带来生存成本的证据有限。相反,有一些证据表明,在繁殖方面投入较多的女性比繁殖投入较低的女性存活率更高:高胎次和最后一次繁殖时的高龄都与高存活率相关。关于繁殖成本的唯一证据是,生育双胞胎的女性(被视为繁殖高投入的一个标志)在50岁以后的死亡率高于其他女性。一个潜在的混杂因素可能是女性之间的健康差异:特别健康的女性可能能够在繁殖和自身生存两方面都大量投入,从而导致我们所观察到的存活率与胎次以及最后生育年龄之间的正相关关系。为了控制女性之间的健康差异,我们重新分析了繁殖与死亡率之间的关系,但在我们的模型中纳入了与健康相关的变量(身高、体重指数和血红蛋白)。即使在控制了健康因素之后,繁殖投入与存活率之间的正相关关系仍然不变。