Authors
Daniel Nettle, Willem E Frankenhuis, Ian J Rickard
Publication date
2013/9/7
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
280
Issue
1766
Pages
20131343
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Many studies in humans have shown that adverse experience in early life is associated with accelerated reproductive timing, and there is comparative evidence for similar effects in other animals. There are two different classes of adaptive explanation for associations between early-life adversity and accelerated reproduction, both based on the idea of predictive adaptive responses (PARs). According to external PAR hypotheses, early-life adversity provides a ‘weather forecast’ of the environmental conditions into which the individual will mature, and it is adaptive for the individual to develop an appropriate phenotype for this anticipated environment. In internal PAR hypotheses, early-life adversity has a lasting negative impact on the individual's somatic state, such that her health is likely to fail more rapidly as she gets older, and there is an advantage to adjusting her reproductive schedule accordingly. We use a …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Nettle, WE Frankenhuis, IJ Rickard - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological …, 2013