Long postmenopausal lifespans distinguish humans from all other primates. This pattern may have evolved with mother–child food sharing, a practice that allowed aging females to enhance their daughters’ fertility, thereby increasing selection against senescence. Combined with Charnov’s dimensionless assembly rules for mammalian life histories, this hypothesis also accounts for our late maturity, small size at weaning, and high fertility. It has implications for past human habitat choice and social organization and for ideas about the importance of extended learning and paternal provisioning in human evolution
Evolutionary life-history theory and demography provide strong reasons to suppose that long human li...
pre-printBoth what we share and don't share with our primate cousins make us human. Easy enough to s...
International audienceMenopause, the permanent cessation of ovulation, occurs in humans well before ...
journal articleWomen and female great apes both continue giving birth into their forties, but not be...
Humans belong to the few species in which females and males live for a relatively long time after th...
Menopause is an evolutionary mystery: how could living longer with no capacity to reproduce possibly...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
Although females in human and the great ape populations reach the end of fertility at similar ages (...
journal articleIn the first paper to present formal theory explaining that senescence is a consequen...
journal articlePostmenopausal longevity may have evolved in our lineage when ancestral grandmothers ...
Reproductive senescence in human females takes place long before other body functions enesce. This f...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
Journal ArticleHuman life histories differ from those of other animals in several striking ways. Rec...
There persist two widely held but mutually inconsistent views on the evolution of post-fertile lifes...
There persist two widely held but mutually inconsistent views on the evolution of post-fertile lifes...
Evolutionary life-history theory and demography provide strong reasons to suppose that long human li...
pre-printBoth what we share and don't share with our primate cousins make us human. Easy enough to s...
International audienceMenopause, the permanent cessation of ovulation, occurs in humans well before ...
journal articleWomen and female great apes both continue giving birth into their forties, but not be...
Humans belong to the few species in which females and males live for a relatively long time after th...
Menopause is an evolutionary mystery: how could living longer with no capacity to reproduce possibly...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
Although females in human and the great ape populations reach the end of fertility at similar ages (...
journal articleIn the first paper to present formal theory explaining that senescence is a consequen...
journal articlePostmenopausal longevity may have evolved in our lineage when ancestral grandmothers ...
Reproductive senescence in human females takes place long before other body functions enesce. This f...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
Journal ArticleHuman life histories differ from those of other animals in several striking ways. Rec...
There persist two widely held but mutually inconsistent views on the evolution of post-fertile lifes...
There persist two widely held but mutually inconsistent views on the evolution of post-fertile lifes...
Evolutionary life-history theory and demography provide strong reasons to suppose that long human li...
pre-printBoth what we share and don't share with our primate cousins make us human. Easy enough to s...
International audienceMenopause, the permanent cessation of ovulation, occurs in humans well before ...