Wasser S K, Barash D P
Q Rev Biol. 1983 Dec;58(4):513-38. doi: 10.1086/413545.
Female mammals experience a very high and often unappreciated rate of reproductive failure. Among human pregnancies alone, over 50 per cent fail between conception and parturition, and the majority of these failures are unexplained. These findings present important problems for evolutionary theory as well as for health care practices. This paper addresses these high rates of reproductive failure among mammals, by extending the work of a number of evolutionary biologists regarding the reproductive consequences of environmental adversity. The basic model upon which we elaborate, termed the Reproductive Suppression Model, argues that females can optimize their lifetime reproductive success by suppressing reproduction when future conditions for the survival of offspring are likely to be sufficiently better than present ones as to exceed the costs of the suppression itself. These costs are a function of reproductive time lost and the direct phenotypic effects of the suppression itself. To evaluate the benefits and costs of suppression, the following types of cues should be assessed: the female's physical and mental health, her stage of reproduction, the physical and genetic status of her offspring, and the external conditions at the time of birth. We also examine various issues of social suppression, whereby the conditions for survival of offspring are a function of the reproduction and support of other group members. Under such conditions, some females may be able to improve current conditions for reproduction by suppressing the reproduction of others. Field data from our own work are presented, describing socially mediated reproductive competition among continuously breeding female yellow baboons and among female hoary marmots. Social suppression in other mammals is also evaluated, including that in human beings, and we conclude with some implications of the Reproductive Suppression Model for sexual selection theory regarding female-female reproductive competition, as well as human health care.
雌性哺乳动物经历着非常高且常常未被重视的生殖失败率。仅在人类怀孕中,超过50%在受孕和分娩之间失败,而且这些失败大多原因不明。这些发现给进化理论以及医疗实践都带来了重要问题。本文通过扩展一些进化生物学家关于环境逆境生殖后果的研究,探讨了哺乳动物中如此高的生殖失败率。我们详细阐述的基本模型,即生殖抑制模型,认为当未来后代生存条件可能比当前条件好得多以至于超过抑制本身的成本时,雌性可以通过抑制生殖来优化其一生的生殖成功率。这些成本是生殖时间损失以及抑制本身的直接表型效应的函数。为了评估抑制的益处和成本,应评估以下几种线索:雌性的身心健康、她的生殖阶段、后代的身体和基因状况以及出生时的外部条件。我们还研究了社会抑制的各种问题,即后代的生存条件是其他群体成员生殖和支持情况的函数。在这种情况下一些雌性可能能够通过抑制其他雌性的生殖来改善当前的生殖条件。文中展示了我们自己研究的实地数据,描述了连续繁殖的雌性黄狒狒和雌性灰白旱獭之间社会介导的生殖竞争。还评估了其他哺乳动物中的社会抑制,包括人类中的情况,最后我们得出了生殖抑制模型对关于雌性 - 雌性生殖竞争的性选择理论以及人类医疗保健的一些启示。