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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Reproductive inequality in humans and other mammals

Author Affiliations
Santa Fe Institute, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, University of New Mexico, University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, ...
Published InProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Year2023
Citations36

Abstract

To address claims of human exceptionalism, we determine where humans fit within the greater mammalian distribution of reproductive inequality. We show that humans exhibit lower reproductive skew (i.e., inequality in the number of surviving offspring) among males and smaller sex differences in reproductive skew than most other mammals, while nevertheless falling within the mammalian range. Additionally, female reproductive skew is higher in polygynous human populations than in polygynous nonhumans mammals on average. This patterning of skew can be attributed in part to the prevalence of monogamy in humans compared to the predominance of polygyny in nonhuman mammals, to the limited degree of polygyny in the human societies that practice it, and to the importance of unequally held rival resources to…
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