Genetic and Shared-Environment Effects on Stature and Lifespan. A Study of Dutch Birth Cohorts (1785–1920) Based on Genealogies

J. Kok
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Abstract

Historical demography is generally concerned with the changing economic, social and normative contexts of human behaviour and health outcomes. To most historical demographers, the 'genetic' component of behaviour and health is either unknown or assumed to be constant. However, several studies point at the shift over time in the relative importance of environment and genes: in periods and social groups with strong normative or economic constraints on behaviour, the 'genetic potential' is often not realized. Therefore, to some extent, the waning of environmental constraints on heritability plays a role in changes in demographic outcomes over time. Determining the relative importance of heritability versus shared environment in historical populations for which only genealogies are available poses a challenge. Kin may live in different periods, and in different cultural and social settings. This explorative paper analyses the association between heights of conscripted relatives, as well as their life span. I estimate how the associations are affected by respectively genetic relatedness, shared historical period and shared social and geographical environment. Furthermore, I make a distinction between kin related via the mother versus kin related via the father. All kinds of kin are involved in the analysis: (half, full and twin) brothers, fathers, grandfathers, uncles and cousins. The data consist of about 3,000 men culled from Texel island genealogies, which also include descendants of families who had left the island. Life span has a weak, but still discernible, genetic element. The heritability of height is much stronger, especially at age 19/20. The correlations of mother’s kin with her son's heights are stronger than those of her husband's kin. The analysis does not yield a consistent effect of a protective environment on kin correlations in either height or life span.
遗传和共享环境对身材和寿命的影响。基于系谱的荷兰出生队列研究(1785-1920)
历史人口学通常关注人类行为和健康结果的不断变化的经济、社会和规范背景。对大多数历史人口统计学家来说,行为和健康的“遗传”成分要么是未知的,要么被认为是恒定的。然而,一些研究指出,随着时间的推移,环境和基因的相对重要性发生了变化:在行为受到强烈规范或经济约束的时期和社会群体中,“遗传潜力”往往没有得到实现。因此,在某种程度上,随着时间的推移,环境对遗传性的限制的减弱在人口结果的变化中发挥了作用。在只有家谱可用的历史种群中,确定遗传力与共享环境的相对重要性是一项挑战。亲属可能生活在不同的时期、不同的文化和社会环境中。本文对应征亲属身高与寿命的关系进行了探索性分析。分别估计了遗传亲缘性、共同的历史时期和共同的社会地理环境对这些关联的影响。此外,我还对母亲亲属关系和父亲亲属关系进行了区分。所有类型的亲属都参与了分析:(半,全和双胞胎)兄弟,父亲,祖父,叔叔和堂兄弟。这些数据包括从特塞尔岛家谱中挑选出来的约3000名男性,其中还包括离开该岛的家庭的后裔。寿命有一个微弱的,但仍然可以识别的遗传因素。身高的遗传性要强得多,尤其是在19/20岁的时候。母亲亲属与儿子身高的相关性强于丈夫亲属。该分析并没有得出保护环境对身高或寿命亲属相关性的一致影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.20
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30 weeks
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