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Copyright

Jonathan Wells

Published On

2024-06-14

Page Range

pp. 637–656

Language

  • English

Print Length

20 pages

27. The Impact of Social Dynamics on Life History Trajectory and Demographic Traits

Insights from the “Producer Scrounger” Game

Chapter of: Human Evolutionary Demography(pp. 637–656)
Evolutionary demography applies models and theories from evolutionary biology to understand variability in fertility and mortality patterns. Many important ecological influences derive from the natural environment, such as the burden of infectious disease, or the availability of energy and other nutrients. However, human society is itself a source of diverse stimuli and stresses that may generate profound impacts on demographic traits. On this issue, much attention to date has focused on the benefits of social interaction, in particular ‘cooperative breeding’ through which the costs of reproduction are shared among kin or others. In contrast, this chapter will use a simple model of social inequality, based on the ecological ‘producer-scrounger’ game, to shed light on how social hierarchy, through the key medium of nutrition, can shape diversity in life history trajectories. Life history trade-offs shape both physiological and behavioural characteristics of individuals, which in turn affect both fertility and mortality profiles. In every society, it is ultimately through relationships embedded in the context of nutrition that different groups within social hierarchies interact. The key insight from the producer-scrounger game is that in social hierarchies, the life history strategies of producers and scroungers are structurally inter-related. This results in contrasting phenotypes and demographic outcomes between the two groups. Those lower in social hierarchies have higher risks, and fewer opportunities to acquire resources, and may adapt through trade-offs that favour immediate survival and reproduction over growth and long-term health maintenance. In contrast, those with priority access to resources may demonstrate trade-offs that favour growth and long-term health maintenance, leading to greater longevity, a lengthier reproductive career and higher quality offspring. These contrasting life history strategies may emerge through the direct control of subordinates by high-ranked individuals, or through indirect control over the resources that subordinates struggle to access. This simple conceptual approach can help understand both contemporary variability within and between populations in demographic traits, and also their historical divergence or convergence over time.

Contributors

Jonathan Wells

(author)
Professor of Anthropology and Pediatric Nutrition at University College London

Jonathan Wells is Professor of Anthropology and Pediatric Nutrition at UCL Great Ormond Institute of Child Health. He conducts research on the developmental origins of adult health and disease in the context of public health nutrition, mostly in low- and middle-income countries, and develops evolutionary conceptual frameworks to help interpret empirical findings.