john hawks weblog

paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

birth

  • Birth politics

    Sat, 2013-03-09 18:51 -- John Hawks

    Alice Roberts writes about the process of childbirth as she awaits her second delivery: "Childbirth: why I take the scientific approach to having a baby". The essay includes a bit of evolutionary perspective and a good discussion of evidence-based medicine and the ways that advocacy can distort it. A teaser:

    Another problem is the politics of birth. It can be quite hard for mums-to-be to access impartial evidence and advice when it seems there are plenty of people wanting to influence your decision in one way or the other. Evangelical advocates of home birth often talk about the importance of women's choice and empowerment, as well as instilling distrust in obstetricians. For me, being empowered to make a decision requires access to good evidence and the freedom to make up my own mind. And whilst "maternal satisfaction" is often put forward as an important factor to be taken into consideration, I want to know what the relative risks are. And if there's not yet enough evidence to assess that – I want to know that too.

    For more detailed reading about the role of evolution in female health, I can recommend Wenda Trevathan's book, Ancient Bodies, Modern Lives: How Evolution Has Shaped Women's Health.

  • The monkey midwife

    Wed, 2013-02-13 10:35 -- John Hawks

    A new paper describes a case of a monkey mother having her birth assisted by another monkey -- in other words, a monkey midwife [1]. Kambiz Kamrani describes the paper well:

    The head, once fully exposed, was grabbed by the midwife, who pulled the baby out with both hands. She progressed to rip open the birth membranes. The new mother reclaimed the infant within a minute, and severed the umbilical cord. She ate the placenta as the midwife descended.

    Black snub-nosed monkeys are Old World monkeys (cercopithecoid primates) native to China. I think this is cool not because it shows that monkeys need midwives (they don't) but because it shows that the behavioral flexibility that may have enabled midwifery in early humans is very extensive among primates. A delicious placental incentive may seem inventive, but humans are mystifyingly strange in being among the few mammals who don't regularly consume the placenta after birth.

    Primate births are still rarely enough observed that the comparative dataset is quite small. As field studies extend this area of observation more broadly, we may yet discover more behavioral flexibility in different primates.


    References

  • Lost pregnancies in geladas after male takeovers

    Thu, 2012-02-23 19:21 -- John Hawks

    Ed Yong reports on new research from Eila Roberts, with Jacinta Beehner's research group at the University of Michigan, who was able to show that the rate of pregnancy loss among geladas (close baboon relatives) skyrockets when a new dominant male takes over a group "The Bruce effect – why some pregnant monkeys abort when new males arrive".

    Geladas live in units where a single dominant male lords over several related females, whom he monopolises as mates. It’s an enviable position, and males often have to fend off takeover bids by eager bachelors. If a newcomer ousts the chief monkey, it’s bad news for the group’s females. A wave of death sweeps through the unit, as the new male kills all the youngsters whom his predecessor fathered. Indeed, babies are 32 times more likely to die after a takeover than at any other time.

    But that’s not all. Eila Roberts from the University of Michigan has found that the new male’s arrival triggers a wave of spontaneous abortions. Within weeks, the vast majority of the local females terminate their pregnancies. It’s the first time that this strategy has been observed in the wild.

    It really adds a new perspective to the well-known examples of male infanticide in primates. Finding early enough evidence of pregnancies and tracking their progress takes painstaking work collecting and processing fecal samples for hormone levels -- where the hormone quantities may be known only long after the researcher returns from the field with observations. The study is in the early access section of Science, which makes it hard for me to give bibliographic information, but here's the abstract.

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Neandertals

For years, I've worked on their bones. Now I'm working on their genes. Read more about the science studying these ancient people.

Denisova

From a finger bone of an ancient human came the record of a completely unexpected population. My lab is working on the science of the Denisova genome.

Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.