Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28961
Title: Life-history tradeoffs in a historical population (1896-1939) undergoing rapid fertility decline: Costs of reproduction?
Authors: Jaeggi, AV
Martin, JS
Floris, J
Bender, N
Haeusler, M
Sear, R
Staub, K
Keywords: demographic transition;quantity–quality tradeoff;life-history theory;evolutionary demography;historical demography
Issue Date: 21-Feb-2022
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Citation: Jaeggi, A.V. et al. (2022) 'Life-history tradeoffs in a historical population (1896-1939) undergoing rapid fertility decline: Costs of reproduction?', Evolutionary Human Sciences, 4, e716, pp. 1 - 16. doi: 10.1017/ehs.2022.2.
Abstract: Evolutionary demographers often invoke tradeoffs between reproduction and survival to explain reductions in fertility during demographic transitions. The evidence for such tradeoffs in humans has been mixed, partly because tradeoffs may be masked by individual differences in quality or access to resources. Unmasking tradeoffs despite such phenotypic correlations requires sophisticated statistical analyses that account for endogeneity among variables and individual differences in access to resources. Here we tested for costs of reproduction using N = 13,663 birth records from the maternity hospital in Basel, Switzerland, 1896–1939, a period characterised by rapid fertility declines. We predicted that higher parity is associated with worse maternal and offspring condition at the time of birth, adjusting for age and a variety of covariates. We used Bayesian multivariate, multilevel models to simultaneously analyse multiple related outcomes while accounting for endogeneity, appropriately modelling non-linear effects, dealing with hierarchical data structures, and effectively imputing missing data. Despite all these efforts, we found virtually no evidence for costs of reproduction. Instead, women with better access to resources had fewer children. Barring limitations of the data, these results are consistent with demographic transitions reflecting women's investment in their own embodied capital and/or the adoption of maladaptive low-fertility norms by elites.
Description: Registered Report.
Research transparency and reproducibility: The accepted Stage 1 manuscript, the anonymised dataset and all R code for reproducing the results can be accessed on the Open Science Framework: https://osf.io/v2s43/files/.
Supplementary material: To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2022.2.
Social media summary: Why did they have fewer babies? Registered report finds no quantity–quality tradeoffs in historical Basel (1896–1939).
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28961
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2022.2
Other Identifiers: ORCiD: Adrian V. Jaeggi https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1695-0388
ORCiD: Rebecca Sear https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4315-0223
e716
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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