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November 2008

Volume 172, Number 5
Am Nat 2008. Vol. 172, pp. 658–666
0003-0147/2008/17205-50349$15.00
DOI: 10.1086/591690

Natural Selection on Male Wealth in Humans

Daniel Nettle* and

Thomas V. Pollet

Centre for Behaviour and Evolution, Newcastle University, Henry Wellcome Building, Framlington Place, Newcastle NE2 4HH, United Kingdom

Although genomic studies suggest that natural selection in humans is ongoing, the strength of selection acting on particular characteristics in human populations has rarely been measured. Positive selection on male wealth appears to be a recurrent feature of human agrarian and pastoralist societies, and there is some evidence of it in industrial populations, too. Here we investigate the strength of selection on male wealth, first in contemporary Britain using data from the National Child Development Study and then across seven other varied human societies. The British data show positive selection on male income driven by increased childlessness among low‐income men but a negative association between personal income and reproductive success for women. Across cultures, selection gradients for male wealth are weakest in industrial countries and strongest in subsistence societies with extensive polygyny. Even the weakest selection gradients observed for male wealth in humans are as strong as or stronger than selection gradients reported from field studies of other species. Thus, selection on male wealth in contemporary humans appears to be ubiquitous and substantial in strength.

Submitted March 31, 2008; Accepted June 17, 2008; Electronically published September 22, 2008

Keywords:

natural selection, natural populations, humans, selection gradients, sexual selection.

Associate Editor: Edmund D. Brodie III

Editor: Michael C. Whitlock

Cited by

T. V. Pollet, T. W. Fawcett, A. P. Buunk, D. Nettle. (2009) Sex-ratio biasing towards daughters among lower-ranking co-wives in Rwanda. Biology Letters
Online publication date: 8-Aug-2009.
CrossRef
V. LLAURENS, M. RAYMOND, C. FAURIE. (2009) Ritual fights and male reproductive success in a human population. Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Online publication date: 1-Aug-2009.
CrossRef
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