Final Edited Parent Offspring and Parental Investment
Final Edited Parent Offspring and Parental Investment
Final Edited Parent Offspring and Parental Investment
◦ Limitless sperm
determined by number of
◦ Number of potential offspring
potential female partners
◦ Required level of parental investment = Low
Females…
◦
Egg is more than 100x larger than sperm
◦ Only release 1 (usually) a month
◦ Fertility lasts for around 30 years
◦ Average 40 weeks pregnancy
◦ Nutrients for fetus comes from mother’s own supplies
◦ Painful birth with potential complications
◦ Breastfeeding (in the past this would have lasted 2 yrs)
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Brain Size
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Brain Size
◦
The female investment is greater as eggs are less numerous and more costly than sperm. A
female is limited in the number of offspring she can produce whereas a male can have a virtually
◦
unlimited number of offspring.
◦ Human mothers make a greater pre-natal contribution through the demands of pregnancy and
◦ carrying and nourishing a child for 40 weeks.
Women also make a greater post-natal contribution through breastfeeding and care.
An increase in brain size has made childbirth more difficult, human babies are born prematurely
◦
and so need extra care and are more dependent on their mothers than other species, resulting in
Alternatively, the required parental investment from males is much lower and the best way for a
male to increase his inclusive fitness is to have many fertile, female partners
These factors explain why women select quality over quantity in potential partners and prioritise
Parent- Offspring
Conflict
Parent – Offspring Conflict
So far we’ve looked at the idea of parental investment as
if the offspring were completely passive in the process.
But this is not the case. The resource allocations that
would maximize parental fitness are not necessarily
identical
This to those
tug-of-war that would
between what amaximize offspring
parent is willing fitness.
to give and
what an offspring wants is termed parent-offspring conflict.
Why does this tug-of-war exist?
Well, we need to understand about diploid, sexually
reproducing critters.
In diploid (sexually reproducing) organisms, the parents
have a 50% relation to each of their offspring. On the
other hand, the offspring is 100% related to itself, 50%
related to its full-siblings, and 25% related to its half-
siblings. This difference in relations creates a conflict.
Weaning Conflict
An example of parent-offspring conflict is the weaning
conflict, which exists in mammals where the mother wants
to stops nursing but her offspring wants to continue. The
sooner the mother weans her baby, the sooner she can
reproduce again, thus having more offspring.
For example, in baboons, the weaning process can last months while the mom
bites, pushes and hits her offspring in order to keep it away, while the baby
cries and screams. So, while the mother rejects it, the baby has all sorts of
tactics to try to get the mother to continue nursing. This arguing leads to a
lengthy weaning process.
Trivers 1974 argues that this results in the
following predictions:
Parents and their children will be in conflict about when the
child should be weaned, with the parents generally wanting to
wean the child sooner to free themselves of this time-
consuming and costly activity and the child wanting to receive
milk for longer in order to ensure healthy growth. Parents
encourage children to value siblings more than they are
naturally inclined to as friendly siblings will share resources,
ensuring that all grow healthily with a better chance that the
parent’s genes are perpetuated, and freeing the parents to
invest in younger and therefore more needy siblings . But in
reality siblings are competing for resources.
◦ food supply to the fetus.
◦
Pre-natal conflict When a fetus perceives that it needs
more nutrition, it releases a hormone
As babies get older and the mom begins rejecting the baby,
it begins throwing tantrums- screaming and yelling, flailing
arms, pulling hair etc. This is not specific just to humans, but
happens a lot in many primates such as chimps, and
otangutans, especially at the height of weaning.
Parent – Offspring Conflict
Conflict After Birth – When their offspring are young and
helpless it is in the interests of the parents to invest more of
their resources in these offspring and less in their older,
stronger brothers and sisters. When these babies become older
and stronger, parents can maximise their own reproductive
fitness by directing their limited resources towards the younger
offspring and away from the older child. Parent-offspring
conflict is often most intense at this transfer stage, as the older
children attempt to prolong the parents’ primary focus on them
for as long as possible.
Sibling Rivalry
• Offspring will want more than their “fair share” at the expense of
their siblings in order to maximise their own fitness.