Hawkes Kristen, Smith Ken R, Robson Shannen L
Department of Anthropology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 84112-0600, USA.
Am J Hum Biol. 2009 Jul-Aug;21(4):578-86. doi: 10.1002/ajhb.20890.
A grandmother hypothesis may explain why humans evolved greater longevity while continuing to end female fertility at about the same age as do the other great apes. With that grandmother hypothesis in mind, we sought to compare age-specific mortality and fertility rates between humans and chimpanzees, our closest living relatives, and found two puzzles. First, we expected that lower adult mortality in humans would be associated with slower senescence, but the rate of chimpanzee demographic aging falls within the human range. Second, we expected declines in age-specific fertility to be similar in the two species but instead of falling in the thirties as it does in women, fertility remains high into the forties in some chimpanzee populations. We report these puzzles using data from nine human populations and both wild and captive chimpanzees, and suggest that systematic differences in the heterogeneity of surviving adults may explain them.
祖母假说或许可以解释为什么人类在继续保持与其他大型类人猿相同的绝经年龄的同时,却进化出了更长的寿命。基于这一祖母假说,我们试图比较人类与其现存最近的近亲黑猩猩之间的年龄特异性死亡率和生育率,结果发现了两个谜题。首先,我们预计人类较低的成年死亡率会与较慢的衰老速度相关,但黑猩猩的人口老龄化速度却处于人类的范围之内。其次,我们预计两个物种的年龄特异性生育率下降情况会相似,但黑猩猩的生育率在某些种群中并非像人类女性那样在三十多岁时下降,而是在四十多岁时仍保持在较高水平。我们利用来自九个人类群体以及野生和圈养黑猩猩的数据报告了这些谜题,并认为存活成年个体异质性的系统性差异或许可以解释它们。