A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Selection for increased brood size in historical human populations




AuthorsHelle S, Lummaa V, Jokela J

PublisherSOC STUDY EVOLUTION

Publication year2004

Journal:Evolution

Journal name in sourceEVOLUTION

Journal acronymEVOLUTION

Volume58

Issue2

First page 430

Last page436

Number of pages7

ISSN0014-3820

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb01658.x


Abstract
Human twinning rates are considered to either reflect the direct fitness effects of twinning in variable environments, or to be a maladaptive by-product of selection for other maternal reproductive traits (e.g., polyovulation). We used historical data (1710-1890) of Sami populations from Northern Scandinavia to contrast these alternative hypotheses. We found that women who produced twins started their reproduction younger, ceased it later, had higher lifetime fecundity, raised more offspring to adulthood, and had higher fitness (individual X) than mothers of singletons in all populations studied. For example, an average of 1.2 offspring survived to adulthood from a twin delivery, irrespective of its sex ratio, whereas only 0.8 offspring survived to adulthood from a singleton delivery. Only if mothers started reproduction at very late age (>37 yr), or had a very long reproductive life span (>20 yr), was it more beneficial to produce only singletons. These findings suggest that twin deliveries among Sami could not be explained as a maladaptive by-product of selection for other maternal reproductive traits. In contrast, our results suggest that twinning was under natural selection, although the strength of selection was likely to have been context dependent.



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