A gene-culture co-evolutionary perspective on the puzzle of human twinship.

Evol Hum Sci

Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Natural selection typically favors smaller litter sizes to enhance offspring survival rates, with primates mainly favoring single births.
  • Humans, despite being the primate with the slowest growth and longest childhood, still have a notable rate of twin births, which raises questions about the evolutionary reasons behind this.
  • Current theories suggest twinning is linked to environmental resources, but data show higher twin rates in poorer economies; this study argues that cultural attitudes towards twins and supportive institutions may explain these trends better.

Article Abstract

Natural selection should favour litter sizes that optimise trade-offs between brood-size and offspring viability. Across the primate order, the modal litter size is one, suggesting a deep history of selection favouring minimal litters in primates. Humans, however - despite having the longest juvenile period and slowest life-history of all primates - still produce twin births at appreciable rates, even though such births are costly. This presents an evolutionary puzzle. Why is twinning still expressed in humans despite its cost? More puzzling still is the discordance between the principal explanations for human twinning and extant empirical data. Such explanations propose that twinning is regulated by phenotypic plasticity in polyovulation, permitting the production of larger sib sets if and when resources are abundant. However, comparative data suggest that twinning rates are actually highest in poorer economies and lowest in richer, more developed economies. We propose that a historical dynamic of gene-culture co-evolution might better explain this geographic patterning. Our explanation distinguishes and cultural contexts, as those celebrating twins (e.g. through material support) and those hostile to twins (e.g. through sanction of twin-infanticide). institutions, in particular, may buffer the fitness cost associated with twinning, potentially reducing selection pressures against polyovulation. We conclude by synthesising a mathematical and empirical research programme that might test our ideas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11588562PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2024.30DOI Listing

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