Abstract
Explaining the evolution of human life history traits remains an important challenge for evolutionary anthropologists. Progress is hindered by a poor appreciation of how demographic factors affect the action of natural selection. I review life history theory showing that the quantity maximized by selection depends on whether and how population growth is regulated. I show that the common use of R, a strategy’s expected lifetime number of offspring, as a fitness maximand is only appropriate under a strict set of conditions, which are apparently unappreciated by anthropologists. To concretely show how demography-free life history theory can lead to errors, I reanalyze an influential model of human life history evolution, which investigated the coevolution of a long lifespan and late age of maturity. I show that the model’s conclusions do not hold under simple changes to the implicitly assumed mechanism of density dependence, even when stated assumptions remain unchanged. This analysis suggests that progress in human life history theory requires better understanding of the demography of our ancestors.
Highlights
Ryan Baldini*OPEN ACCESS Citation: Baldini R (2015) The Importance of Population Growth and Regulation in Human Life History Evolution
The unusual life history characteristics of humans provide a unique challenge to evolutionary anthropologists
Humans have a distinctive life history even among our closest living relatives: compared to other primates, we endure a long juvenile period of intensive growth, learning, and extreme dependency; we mature and reproduce late; we have long reproductive careers with short interbirth intervals; and we enjoy a long post-reproductive lifespan [1, 2]. This pronounced life course has attracted the attention of many theorists, and some novel, human-specific theories have been proposed [1, 3, 4, 5] alongside more species-general life history theory [2, 6, 7]
Summary
OPEN ACCESS Citation: Baldini R (2015) The Importance of Population Growth and Regulation in Human Life History Evolution. Explaining the evolution of human life history traits remains an important challenge for evolutionary anthropologists. I review life history theory showing that the quantity maximized by selection depends on whether and how population growth is regulated. I show that the model’s conclusions do not hold under simple changes to the implicitly assumed mechanism of density dependence, even when stated assumptions remain unchanged. This analysis suggests that progress in human life history theory requires better understanding of the demography of our ancestors.
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