Literature DB >> 26189622

Food sharing at meals : Kinship, reciprocity, and clustering in the taimyr autonomous okrug, northern Russia.

John Ziker1, Michael Schnegg2.   

Abstract

The presence of a kinship link between nuclear families is the strongest predictor of interhousehold sharing in an indigenous, predominantly Dolgan food-sharing network in northern Russia. Attributes such as the summed number of hunters in paired households also account for much of the variation in sharing between nuclear families. Differences in the number of hunters in partner households, as well as proximity and producer/consumer ratios of households, were investigated with regard to cost-benefit models. The subset of households involved in reciprocal meal sharing is 26 of 84 household host-guest pairs. The frequency of reciprocal meal sharing between families in this subset is positively correlated with average household relatedness. The evolution of cooperation through clustering may illuminate the relationship between kinship and reciprocity at this most intimate level of food sharing.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Costly signaling; Evolution of cooperation; Hunter-gatherers; Inclusive fitness; Parental investment; Reciprocal altruism; Siberia; Tolerated scrounging

Year:  2005        PMID: 26189622     DOI: 10.1007/s12110-005-1003-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Nat        ISSN: 1045-6767


  12 in total

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10.  The logic of social exchange: has natural selection shaped how humans reason? Studies with the Wason selection task.

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  18 in total

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9.  Food-Sharing Networks in Lamalera, Indonesia: Reciprocity, Kinship, and Distance.

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10.  Inclusive fitness and differential productivity across the life course determine intergenerational transfers in a small-scale human society.

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