Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Teriokhin A. T., Budilova E. V., Thomas F., Guégan Jean-François. (2004). Worldwide variation in life-span sexual dimorphism and sex-specific environmental mortality rates. Human Biology, 76 (4), p. 623-641. ISSN 0018-7143.

Titre du document
Worldwide variation in life-span sexual dimorphism and sex-specific environmental mortality rates
Année de publication
2004
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000226499200010
Auteurs
Teriokhin A. T., Budilova E. V., Thomas F., Guégan Jean-François
Source
Human Biology, 2004, 76 (4), p. 623-641 ISSN 0018-7143
In all human populations mean life span of women generally exceeds that of men, but the extent of this sexual dimorphism varies across different regions of the world. Our purpose here is to study, using global demographic and environmental data. the general tendency of this variation and local deviations from it. We used data on male and female life. history traits and environmental conditions for 227 countries and autonomous territories; for each country or territory the life-span dimorphism Was defined as the difference between mean life spans of women and men. The general tendency is an increase of life-span dimorphism With increasing average male-female life span; this tendency can be explained using a demographic model based on the Makeham-Gompertz equation. Roughly. the life-span dimorphism increases with the average life span because of an increase in the duration of expressing sex- and age-dependent mortality described by the second (exponential) term of the Makeham-Gompertz equation. Thus we investigated the differences in male and female environmental mortality described by the first term of the Makeham-Gompertz equation fined to the data. The general pattern that resulted was an increase in male mortality at the highest and lowest latitudes. One plausible explanation is that specific factors tied to extreme latitudes influence males more strongly than females. In particular, alcohol consumption increases with increasing latitude and. on the contrary, infection pressures increase With decreasing latitude. This finding agrees with other observations, such as an increase in male mortality excess in Europe and Christian countries and an increase in female mortality excess in Asia and Muslim countries. An increase in the excess of female mortality may also be due to increased maternal mortality caused by an increase in fertility. However, this relation is not linear: In re-mons with the highest fertility (e.g. in Africa) the excess of female mortality is smaller than in regions with relatively lower fertility (e.g., in Asia). A possible explanation of this phenomenon is an evolutionary adaptation of women to the pressures of extremely high fertility by means of some reduction of their maternal mortality.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Société, développement social [106]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010076793]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010076793
Contact