Article

The effect of socio-economic status and food availability on first birth interval in a preindustrial human population

Details

Citation

Nenko I, Hayward A & Lummaa V (2014) The effect of socio-economic status and food availability on first birth interval in a preindustrial human population. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Section B: Biology, 281 (1775), Art. No.: 20132319. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2013.2319

Abstract
Individual variation in nutritional status has direct implications for fitness and thus is crucial in shaping patterns of life-history variation. Nevertheless, it is difficult to measure in natural populations, especially in humans. Here, we used longitudinal data on individual life-histories and annual crop yield variation collected from pre-industrial Finnish populations experiencing natural mortality and fertility to test the validity of first birth interval (FBI; time between marriage and first birth) as a surrogate measure of nutritional status. We evaluated whether women with different socio-economic groups differ in length of FBI, whether women of poorer socio-economic status and experiencing lower crop yields conceive slower following marriage, and whether shorter FBI is associated with higher lifetime breeding success. We found that poorer women had longer FBI and reduced probability of giving birth in months with low food availability, while the FBI of richer women was not affected by variation in food availability. Women with shorter FBI achieved higher lifetime breeding success and a faster reproductive rate. This is, to our knowledge, the first study to show a direct relationship between environmental conditions and speed of childbirth following marriage, highlighting the value of FBI as an indicator of nutritional status when direct data are lacking.

Keywords
nutritional status; reproduction; environmental variation; first childbirth

Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Section B: Biology: Volume 281, Issue 1775

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2014
Publication date online27/11/2013
Date accepted by journal30/10/2013
PublisherThe Royal Society
ISSN0080-455X