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Costs and Consequences of Reproduction

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Homo Novus – A Human Without Illusions

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Abstract

The life history of women is characterized by several unusual patterns: women have a relatively late age at maturity compared to other primates, they produce offspring at short inter-birth intervals, and typically have many dependent offspring of varying ages to care for simultaneously. Women then lose their potential to bear children at menopause but can live a few decades afterwards. Such a reproductive strategy involves several trade-offs and costs of reproduction to future success that have to be optimized across the entire lifespan. This chapter summarizes evidence from humans on the costs of reproduction. First, I discuss the short-and long-term effects of investment in reproduction on the survival patterns of individuals. Second, I address how current reproductive investment affects the ability to invest in future reproductive events. Third, I review the evidence for such costs of reproduction and trade-offs changing with the age of the individual and across different environments. Trade-offs are predicted to be most severe among the very young and senescing females, and when resources are limited. Finally, I investigate the heritable genetic basis for individual differences in the consequences of reproduction, and how heritabilities and genetic trade-offs between traits vary with age and across environmental conditions.

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Acknowledgments

Thanks to Palestina Guevara-Fiore for temporarily removing my personal costs of reproduction; Duncan Gillespie, Samuli Helle, Mirkka Lahdenperä, Jianghua Liu, Jenni Pettay, Ian Rickard, and Matthew Robinson for help with the literature; and the Royal Society of London for funding.

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Lummaa, V. (2010). Costs and Consequences of Reproduction. In: Frey, U., Störmer, C., Willführ, K. (eds) Homo Novus – A Human Without Illusions. The Frontiers Collection. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-12142-5_9

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