在工业化前的人类中,哥哥姐姐的数量与早期生活存活率之间的年龄和性别依赖关系。

IF 3.5
Proceedings. Biological sciences Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-09-03 DOI:10.1098/rspb.2025.1525
Mark Spa, Euan A Young, Virpi Lummaa, Erik Postma, Hannah L Dugdale
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引用次数: 0

摘要

兄弟姐妹是一个人早期生活环境的重要组成部分,因此可能在塑造一个人的生存中起着重要作用。然而,兄弟姐妹对生存的影响的量化是具有挑战性的,特别是在具有长时间亲代照顾和世代重叠的长寿物种中,比如人类。在这里,我们使用来自瑞士的历史教区数据来量化哥哥姐姐的数量及其生存状况、年龄和性别与儿童生存的关系。在1750年至1870年间出生的2941个焦点个体中,哥哥姐姐的总数并不能预测个体的童年存活率。然而,通过兄弟姐妹的生存状态、年龄和性别来区分兄弟姐妹揭示了一些关联,在某些情况下,这些关联还与焦点个体的性别相互作用:年龄相近的哥哥会降低女孩的存活率(但不会降低男孩的存活率),而年龄相近的姐姐越多,弟弟妹妹的存活率就越高。因此,我们的研究结果表明,年长的兄弟姐妹在塑造早期生活中发挥着重要作用,并强调了兄弟姐妹相关关联的强度和方向是依赖于环境的,可以通过生物和文化因素产生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Age- and sex-dependent associations between the number of older siblings and early-life survival in pre-industrial humans.

Age- and sex-dependent associations between the number of older siblings and early-life survival in pre-industrial humans.

Siblings are an important part of an individual's early-life environment and may therefore play an important role in shaping an individual's survival. The quantification of sibling effects on survival is challenging, however, especially in long-lived species with extended parental care and overlapping generations, such as humans. Here, we use historical parish data from Switzerland to quantify how the number of older siblings and their survival status, age and sex are associated with childhood survival. Across 2941 focal individuals born between 1750 and 1870, the total number of older siblings did not predict an individual's childhood survival probability. However, distinguishing between siblings by their survival status, age and sex revealed several associations, which in some cases also interacted with the sex of the focal individual: while older brothers close in age reduced the survival of girls (but not boys), having more older sisters close in age improved their younger sibling's survival. Our results therefore suggest that older siblings play an important role in shaping early-life survival and highlight that the strength and direction of sibling-related associations are context-dependent and can arise through both biological and cultural factors.

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