Intergenerational effects of early adversity on survival in wild baboons

Author:

Zipple Matthew N1ORCID,Archie Elizabeth A23,Tung Jenny1345ORCID,Altmann Jeanne36,Alberts Susan C1345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, United States

2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, United States

3. Institute of Primate Research, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya

4. Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, United States

5. Duke Population Research Institute, Duke University, Durham, United States

6. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, United States

Abstract

Early life adversity can affect an individual’s health, survival, and fertility for many years after the adverse experience. Whether early life adversity also imposes intergenerational effects on the exposed individual’s offspring is not well understood. We fill this gap by leveraging prospective, longitudinal data on a wild, long-lived primate. We find that juveniles whose mothers experienced early life adversity exhibit high mortality before age 4, independent of the juvenile’s own experience of early adversity. These juveniles often preceded their mothers in death by 1 to 2 years, indicating that high adversity females decline in their ability to raise offspring near the end of life. While we cannot exclude direct effects of a parent’s environment on offspring quality (e.g., inherited epigenetic changes), our results are completely consistent with a classic parental effect, in which the environment experienced by a parent affects its future phenotype and therefore its offspring’s phenotype.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Leakey Foundation

National Science Foundation

Duke University

Princeton University

University of Notre Dame

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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