Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
Laboratory for Animal Social Evolution and Recognition, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Jun 18;121(25):e2403491121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2403491121. Epub 2024 Jun 14.
Animals, and mammals in particular, vary widely in their "pace of life," with some species living long lives and reproducing infrequently (slow life histories) and others living short lives and reproducing often (fast life histories). These species also vary in the importance of maternal care in offspring fitness: In some species, offspring are fully independent of their mothers following a brief period of nutritional input, while others display a long period of continued dependence on mothers well after nutritional dependence. Here, we hypothesize that these two axes of variation are causally related to each other, such that extended dependence of offspring on maternal presence leads to the evolution of longer lives at the expense of reproduction. We use a combination of deterministic modeling and stochastic agent-based modeling to explore how empirically observed links between maternal survival and offspring fitness are likely to shape the evolution of mortality and fertility. Each of our modeling approaches leads to the same conclusion: When maternal survival has a strong impact on the survival of offspring and grandoffspring, populations evolve longer lives with less frequent reproduction. Our results suggest that the slow life histories of humans and other primates as well as other long-lived, highly social animals such as hyenas, whales, and elephants are partially the result of the strong maternal care that these animals display. We have designed our models to be readily parameterized with demographic data that are routinely collected by long-term researchers, which will facilitate more thorough testing of our hypothesis.
动物,尤其是哺乳动物,在“生活节奏”上差异很大,有些物种寿命长,繁殖频率低(慢生活史),而有些物种寿命短,繁殖频率高(快生活史)。这些物种在后代适应能力中母体照顾的重要性也有所不同:在一些物种中,后代在短暂的营养输入后完全独立于母亲,而在其他物种中,后代在营养依赖后很长一段时间内仍然继续依赖母亲。在这里,我们假设这两个变异轴彼此之间存在因果关系,即后代对母体存在的长期依赖会导致寿命延长,而牺牲繁殖。我们使用确定性建模和基于主体的随机建模相结合的方法来探索母体存活与后代适应能力之间的经验关系如何可能影响死亡率和生育率的进化。我们的两种建模方法都得出了相同的结论:当母体的存活对后代和孙代的存活有重大影响时,种群会进化出寿命更长、繁殖频率更低的特征。我们的研究结果表明,人类和其他灵长类动物以及其他长寿、高度社会化的动物(如鬣狗、鲸鱼和大象)的慢生活史部分是由于这些动物表现出的强烈的母性照顾。我们设计了这些模型,可以方便地用长期研究人员经常收集的人口统计数据进行参数化,这将有助于更彻底地检验我们的假设。