Mothers facing greater environmental adversity experience increased costs of reproduction
Euan A. Young, Erik Postma, Virpi Lummaa, Hannah L. Dugdale

TL;DR
Women who had more children during a famine lived shorter lives, showing that harsh conditions increase the cost of reproduction.
Contribution
The study reveals how environmental adversity influences the life-span costs of reproduction in women.
Findings
Mothers exposed to the Great Finnish Famine during reproduction had a life expectancy decrease of ~0.5 years per child.
Reproduction did not affect life span for women not exposed to famine or exposed postreproduction or during development.
Environmental adversity explains inconsistent findings on reproductive costs and aging.
Abstract
Evolutionary theory of aging predicts that women with increased reproductive effort live shorter lives, but evidence is inconsistent. These inconsistencies could be because environmental conditions influence how much a mother’s life span is reduced when having more children, i.e., their life-span cost of reproduction. Using a structural equation measurement model, we compare how reproductive effort affects the life span of 4684 women exposed across different life stages, or not at all, to the Great Finnish Famine. We find that life-span costs of reproduction became higher in mothers exposed to the famine during reproduction and, for these mothers, amounted to lower life expectancies of ~0.5 years per child. Conversely, reproduction did not shape the life spans of mothers not exposed to the famine or exposed postreproduction or during development. This natural experiment reveals how…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior · Genetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms · Birth, Development, and Health
