Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, United Kingdom.
Ecology. 2010 Dec;91(12):3515-25. doi: 10.1890/10-0019.1.
Environmental conditions in early life can profoundly affect individual development and have consequences for reproductive success. Limited food availability may be one of the reasons for this, but direct evidence linking variation in early-life nutrition to reproductive performance in adulthood in natural populations is sparse. We combined historical agricultural data with detailed demographic church records to investigate the effect of food availability around the time of birth on the reproductive success of 927 men and women born in 18th-century Finland. Our study population exhibits natural mortality and fertility rates typical of many preindustrial societies, and individuals experienced differing access to resources due to social stratification. We found that among both men and women born into landless families (i.e., with low access to resources), marital prospects, probability of reproduction, and offspring viability were all positively related to local crop yield during the birth year. Such effects were generally absent among those born into landowning families. Among landless individuals born when yields of the two main crops, rye and barley, were both below median, only 50% of adult males and 55% of adult females gained any reproductive success in their lifetime, whereas 97% and 95% of those born when both yields were above the median did so. Our results suggest that maternal investment in offspring in prenatal or early postnatal life may have profound implications for the evolutionary fitness of human offspring, particularly among those for which resources are more limiting. Our study adds support to the idea that early nutrition can limit reproductive success in natural animal populations, and provides the most direct evidence to date that this process applies to humans.
生命早期的环境条件会深刻地影响个体的发育,并对生殖成功产生影响。食物供应有限可能是其中的一个原因,但直接将生命早期营养的变化与自然种群中成年后的生殖表现联系起来的证据却很少。我们结合了历史农业数据和详细的人口教会记录,调查了出生前后食物供应对 18 世纪芬兰 927 名男性和女性生殖成功的影响。我们的研究人群表现出许多前工业化社会的典型自然死亡率和生育率,并且由于社会分层,个体经历了不同的资源获取。我们发现,在那些出生于无地家庭(即资源获取机会较低)的男性和女性中,婚姻前景、繁殖概率和后代存活率都与出生年份的当地作物产量呈正相关。这种影响在出生于土地拥有家庭的人群中通常不存在。在那些出生时两种主要作物(黑麦和大麦)产量都低于中位数的无地个体中,只有 50%的成年男性和 55%的成年女性在其一生中获得了任何生殖成功,而那些出生时两种作物产量都高于中位数的个体中,有 97%和 95%的人获得了生殖成功。我们的结果表明,母亲在产前或产后早期对子代的投资可能对人类后代的进化适应性产生深远影响,尤其是在资源更为有限的情况下。我们的研究为早期营养可以限制自然动物种群生殖成功的观点提供了支持,并提供了迄今为止最直接的证据,证明这一过程适用于人类。