| Literature DB >> 26064662 |
Nikhil Chaudhary1, Gul Deniz Salali1, James Thompson1, Mark Dyble1, Abigail Page1, Daniel Smith1, Ruth Mace1, Andrea Bamberg Migliano1.
Abstract
The occurrence of polygynous marriage in hunter-gatherer societies, which do not accumulate wealth, remains largely unexplored since resource availability is dependent on male hunting capacity and limited by the lack of storage. Hunter-gatherer societies offer the greatest insight in to human evolution since they represent the majority of our species' evolutionary history. In order to elucidate the evolution of hunter-gatherer polygyny, we study marriage patterns of BaYaka Pygmies. We investigate (i) rates of polygyny among BaYaka hunter-gatherers; (ii) whether polygyny confers a fitness benefit to BaYaka men; (iii) in the absence of wealth inequalities, what are the alternative explanations for polygyny among the BaYaka. To understand the latter, we explore differences in phenotypic quality (height and strength), and social capital (popularity in gift games). We find polygynous men have increased reproductive fitness; and that social capital and popularity but not phenotypic quality might have been important mechanisms by which some male hunter-gatherers sustained polygynous marriages before the onset of agriculture and wealth accumulation.Entities:
Keywords: genetic quality; hunter–gatherers; polygyny; social capital; social networks
Year: 2015 PMID: 26064662 PMCID: PMC4453254 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.150054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Multiple regression of number of living offspring on marital status, controlling for age rank. The predictor ‘polygynous’ is a dummy variable—its coefficient represents the change in number of living offspring for age when a man is coded as polygynously married. Thirty-nine refers to total sample size, of which 10 men were polygynous.
| coeff. | ||
|---|---|---|
| polygynous | 1.307 | 0.025* |
| log age rank | 8.721 | 0.000*** |
***p<0.001, *p<0.05.
Figure 1.Scatter plot and regression lines of number of currently living offspring by age rank. Purple squares/line are polygynous individuals and blue circles/line are non-polygynous individuals.
One-way randomization tests comparing phenotypic quality and social capital of polygynous and non-polygynous men. Sample sizes are indicated: the first value is total sample size and the value in parentheses refers to the number of polygynous men in the sample.
| mean (polygynous) | mean (non-polygynous) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | |||||
| height (cm) | 66 (10) | 155.7 | 154.6 | −0.500 | 0.616 |
| hand-grip | 62 (10) | 46.6 | 45.7 | −0.174 | 0.871 |
| ( | |||||
| Gift Game | 44 (5) | 0.842 | −0.102 | −2.015 | 0.034* |
*p<0.05.
Figure 2.Boxplot comparing gift game in-degree z-scores of polygynous and non-polygynous men. Z-scores are standardized by camp, to allow simultaneous comparison of social capital of men from all camps by controlling for camp size. Hollow circles represent outliers. Sample sizes are indicated in parentheses.