Child volunteers in a women's paramilitary organization in World War II have accelerated reproductive schedules




Lynch R, Lummaa V, Briga M, Chapman SN, Loehr J

PublisherNATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

2020

Nature Communications

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS

NAT COMMUN

2377

11

1

10

2041-1723

2041-1723

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15703-0

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/47561396



Understanding how conditions experienced during development affect reproductive timing is of considerable cross-disciplinary interest. Life-history theory predicts that organisms will accelerate reproduction when future survival is unsure. In humans, this can be triggered by early exposure to mortality. Previous studies, however, have been inconclusive due to several confounds that are also likely to affect reproduction. Here we take advantage of a natural experiment in which a population is temporarily divided by war to analyze how exposure to mortality affects reproduction. Using records of Finnish women in World War II, we find that young girls serving in a paramilitary organization wait less time to reproduce, have shorter inter-birth intervals, and have more children than their non-serving peers or sisters. These results support the hypothesis that exposure to elevated mortality rates during development can result in accelerated reproductive schedules and adds to our understanding of how participation in warfare affects women. Life history theory predicts that females will adjust reproductive timing in response to environmental challenges. Here the authors show that young girls exposed to higher mortality rates during war give birth earlier and more often than their peers who were not exposed to these conditions.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:17