The impact of parental investment on lifetime reproductive success in Iceland

Background Demonstrating the impact that parents have on the fitness of their children is a crucial step towards understanding how parental investment has affected human evolution. Parents not only transfer genes to their children, they also influence their environments. By analyzing reproductive pa...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:PeerJ
Main Authors: Lynch, Robert F., Lynch, Emily C.
Other Authors: Fulbright Scholarship and Center of Human Evolutionary Studies Small Grant, Rutgers University
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PeerJ 2017
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2904
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Summary:Background Demonstrating the impact that parents have on the fitness of their children is a crucial step towards understanding how parental investment has affected human evolution. Parents not only transfer genes to their children, they also influence their environments. By analyzing reproductive patterns within and between different categories of close relatives, this study provides insight into the genetic and environmental effects that parents have on the fitness of their offspring. Methods We use data spanning over two centuries from an exceptionally accurate Icelandic genealogy, Íslendingabók, to analyze the relationship between the fertility rates of close relatives. Also, using genetic data, we determine narrow sense heritability estimates ( h 2 ) to further explore the genetic impact on lifetime reproductive success. Finally, we construct four simulations to model the expected contribution of genes and resources on reproductive success. Results The relationship between the reproduction of all full sibling pairs was significant and positive across all birth decades ( r = 0.19) while the reproductive relationship between parents and offspring was often negative across many decades and undetectable overall ( r = 0.00) (Fig. 1 and Table 1). Meanwhile, genetic data among 8,456 pairs of full siblings revealed a narrow sense heritability estimate ( h 2 ) of 0.00 for lifetime reproductive success. A resources model (following the rule that resources are transmitted from parents to children, distributed equally among siblings, and are the only factor affecting reproductive success) revealed a similar trend: a negative relationship between parent and offspring reproduction ( r = − 0.35) but a positive relationship among full siblings ( r = 0.28). The relationship between parent and offspring lifetime reproductive success (LRS) and full sibling LRS was strongly and positively correlated across time ( r = 0.799, p < 0.001). Similarly, the LRS among full siblings was positively correlated with both the LRS among ...