A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Differential grandparental investment when maternal grandmothers are living versus deceased




AuthorsTanskanen Antti O, Helle Samuli, Danielsbacka Mirkka

PublisherThe Royal Society Publishing

Publishing placeLontoo

Publication year2023

JournalBiology Letters

Journal name in sourceBIOLOGY LETTERS

Journal acronymBIOL LETTERS

Article number 20230061

Volume19

Issue5

Number of pages5

ISSN1744-9561

eISSN1744-957X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2023.0061

Web address https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2023.0061


Abstract
Grandparents can increase their inclusive fitness by investing time and resources in their grandchildren. However, not all grandparents make such investments equally, and between-grandparent differences in this regard can be predicted based on paternity uncertainty, lineage and grandparents' sex. Using population-based data for English and Welsh adolescents (n = 1430), we examined whether the death of the most important grandparent (in terms of investment), the maternal grandmother (MGM), changes relative support for existing hypotheses predicting differential grandparental-investment patterns. To contrast the predictions of the grandparental investment hypotheses, we used generalized order-restricted information criterion approximation. We consequently found that, when MGMs are alive, the most-supported hypothesis is 'discriminative grandparental solicitude', which ranks grandparental investment as MGMs > maternal grandfathers (MGFs) > paternal grandmothers (PGMs) > paternal grandfathers (PGFs). However, when MGMs are deceased, the paternity uncertainty hypothesis (MGFs = PGMs > PGFs) receives the most support; this is due to increased investment by PGMs. Thus, when the heaviest investors (i.e. MGMs) are deceased, PGM investments are closer to-but do not exceed-MGF investments.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:56