Testing evolutionary theories of menopause

Author:

Shanley Daryl P1,Sear Rebecca2,Mace Ruth3,Kirkwood Thomas B.L1

Affiliation:

1. Henry Wellcome Laboratory for Biogerontology Research, Institute for Ageing and Health, Newcastle UniversityNewcastle upon Tyne NE4 6BE, UK

2. Department of Social Policy, London School of EconomicsHoughton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK

3. Department of Anthropology, University College LondonGower Street, London WC1 6BT, UK

Abstract

Why do women cease fertility rather abruptly through menopause at an age well before generalized senescence renders child rearing biologically impossible? The two main evolutionary hypotheses are that menopause serves either (i) to protect mothers from rising age-specific maternal mortality risks, thereby protecting their highly dependent younger children from death if the mother dies or (ii) to provide post-reproductive grandmothers who enhance their inclusive fitness by helping to care and provide for their daughters' children. Recent theoretical work indicates that both factors together are necessary if menopause is to provide an evolutionary advantage. However, these ideas need to be tested using detailed data from actual human life histories lived under reasonably ‘natural’ conditions; for obvious reasons, such data are extremely scarce. We here describe a study based on a remarkably complete dataset from The Gambia. The data provided quantitative estimates for key parameters for the theoretical model, which were then used to assess the actual effects on fitness. Empirically based numerical analysis of this nature is essential if the enigma of menopause is to be explained satisfactorily in evolutionary terms. Our results point to the distinctive (and perhaps unique) role of menopause in human evolution and provide important support for the hypothesized evolutionary significance of grandmothers.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference42 articles.

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2. Kinship Network, Direct Childcare, and Fertility Among Hungarians and Gypsies

3. Termination of reproduction in nonhuman and human female primates

4. Female post-reproductive lifespan: a general mammalian trait

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