By MARK ELGAR
Research claiming that men are to blame for menopause has gone viral in the popular media in the past week. But does the theoretical model’s fundamental assumption – that men prefer young women – stack up?
It may surprise some to discover that, in many respects, humans are remarkably unremarkable. Our physiology and morphology is similar to other higher primates. In fact, it follows a broadly similar blueprint for primates and mammals more generally.
Nevertheless, we clearly lack the impressive size dimorphism of gorillas, the extraordinarily large testes of chimpanzees, and only a tiny fraction of our species share the fabulous hair colour of orangutans.
Humans also align unremarkably with conventional life-history theory, which attempts to understand how natural selection has shaped the principal events in an organism’s lifetime. Recent comparisons of mortality schedules in natural populations of primates, including humans, for instance, reveal similar patterns.
But we are unusual in at least one respect. In the vast majority of species, males and females die shortly after they cease producing and caring for dependent offspring. Several species of small marsupials of the genus Antechinus spectacularly illustrate this effect. Male and female Antechinus typically survive only one reproductive cycle.
Top Comments
I agree with some of Elgar’s criticism of the
original research article. Singh et. al does, in fact, cite two papers (written
by Singh himself) describing male driven sexual selection. However, neither
paper concludes that males preferentially mate with younger women. I agree with
Elgar that if this assumption is incorrect or unproven, the conclusion that
Sing et. al make would be incorrect. I disagree with Elgar when he says that the
original study would be flawed if preferential mating were socially derived. It
would not matter the reason men chose
to preferentially mate with younger women. According to the models used in Singh
et. al (2013), as long as men did choose to mate with younger women - for whatever
reason - female fertility-reducing mutations would become fixed leading to
menopause. Thus, whether this biased mating had genetic origins, social origins,
or a combination of genetic and social origins, menopause would still result
according to Sing et. al (2013).
Why was this study carried out or given any attention? Thank you to the Professor for highlighting the flaws. I would have thought that it was very likely a result of our continually lengthening life spans. We once used to die pretty soon after finishing reproduction after all.