Walker Robert S, Gurven Michael, Burger Oskar, Hamilton Marcus J
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Proc Biol Sci. 2008 Apr 7;275(1636):827-33. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.1511.
Life-history theory posits a fundamental trade-off between number and size of offspring that structures the variability in parental investment across and within species. We investigate this 'quantity-quality' trade-off across primates and present evidence that a similar trade-off is also found across natural-fertility human societies. Restating the classic Smith-Fretwell model in terms of allometric scaling of resource supply and offspring investment predicts an inverse scaling relation between birth rate and offspring size and a (-1/4) power scaling between birth rate and body size. We show that these theoretically predicted relationships, in particular the inverse scaling between number and size of offspring, tend to hold across increasingly finer scales of analyses (i.e. from mammals to primates to apes to humans). The advantage of this approach is that the quantity-quality trade-off in humans is placed into a general framework of parental investment that follows directly from first principles of energetic allocation.
生活史理论假定后代数量与大小之间存在一种基本权衡,这种权衡构成了物种间和物种内亲代投资的变异性。我们研究了灵长类动物之间的这种“数量 - 质量”权衡,并提供证据表明在自然生育的人类社会中也存在类似的权衡。根据资源供应和后代投资的异速生长比例重新阐述经典的史密斯 - 弗雷特韦尔模型,预测出生率与后代大小之间呈反比比例关系,出生率与体型之间呈(-1/4)幂比例关系。我们表明,这些理论预测的关系,特别是后代数量与大小之间的反比比例关系,在越来越精细的分析尺度上(即从哺乳动物到灵长类动物到猿类再到人类)往往成立。这种方法的优点是,人类的数量 - 质量权衡被置于一个直接源于能量分配第一原理的亲代投资通用框架中。