Trumble Benjamin C, Stieglitz Jonathan, Jaeggi Adrian V, Beheim Bret, Schwartz Matthew, Seabright Edmond, Cummings Daniel, Kaplan Hillard, Gurven Michael
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, USA; Center for Evolution and Medicine, Arizona State University, USA.
Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, France.
Physiol Behav. 2018 Sep 1;193(Pt A):101-107. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.02.028. Epub 2018 May 2.
The physiology of fatherhood is a growing field of study, and variability in hormonal mediators of reproductive effort (e.g. testosterone, cortisol) can predict variability in paternal investment. Studies often find that lower testosterone levels are associated with increased paternal investment, though most studies are conducted under relatively stable ecological conditions. In this paper, we examine parental physiological correlates of crop loss and family health problems among Tsimane forager-horticulturalists following a catastrophic flood in lowland Bolivia. Immediately after a devastating 2014 flood that impacted >75% of Tsimane communities, we conducted structured interviews examining crop losses and morbidity, and collected saliva specimens from 421 parents (n = 292 households) to analyze cortisol and testosterone. Over 98% of interviewees reported horticultural losses, with the average family losing 88% of their crops, while 80% of families reported flood-induced injuries or illnesses. Controlling for age, body mass index, and time of specimen collection, men's testosterone was negatively associated with both absolute cropland losses (Std. β = -0.16, p = 0.037), and percent of cropland lost (Std. β = -0.16, p = 0.040). Female testosterone was not associated with crop losses. Using the same control variables, both male and female cortisol was negatively associated with a composite measure of child health burden (fathers: Std. β = -0.34, p < 0.001; mothers: Std. β = -0.23, p = 0.037). These results are discussed in the cultural context of a strong sexual division of labor among Tsimane; we highlight the physiological and psychosocial costs of experiencing a natural disaster, especially for paternal caregivers in a nutritionally and pathogenically stressed subsistence population where cultigens provide the majority of calories in the diet.
父亲身份的生理学是一个不断发展的研究领域,生殖努力的激素调节因子(如睾酮、皮质醇)的变化可以预测父亲投资的变化。研究经常发现,较低的睾酮水平与增加的父亲投资有关,不过大多数研究是在相对稳定的生态条件下进行的。在本文中,我们研究了玻利维亚低地一场灾难性洪水后,齐曼内觅食-园艺者中作物损失与家庭健康问题的父母生理相关性。在2014年那场影响了超过75%齐曼内社区的毁灭性洪水过后,我们立即进行了结构化访谈,调查作物损失和发病率,并从421名父母(来自292个家庭)那里收集了唾液样本,以分析皮质醇和睾酮。超过98%的受访者报告了园艺作物损失,平均每个家庭损失了88%的作物,而80%的家庭报告了洪水导致的受伤或疾病。在控制了年龄、体重指数和样本采集时间后,男性的睾酮与绝对农田损失(标准β=-0.16,p=0.037)以及农田损失百分比(标准β=-0.16,p=0.040)均呈负相关。女性睾酮与作物损失无关。使用相同的控制变量,男性和女性的皮质醇均与儿童健康负担的综合指标呈负相关(父亲:标准β=-0.34,p<0.001;母亲:标准β=-0.23,p=0.037)。这些结果将在齐曼内存在强烈性别分工的文化背景下进行讨论;我们强调了经历自然灾害的生理和心理社会成本,特别是对于一个在营养和病原体压力下的生存人口中担任父亲照顾角色的人,在这样的人口中,栽培作物提供了饮食中的大部分热量。