
Fathers Spend More Time With Children Who
Resemble Them, Study Suggests
ScienceDaily (July 8, 2009) —
Darwin's theory of evolution predicts that men will take more care of children
that look like them. A team at the Institut des sciences de l'évolution (CNRS
/ Université de Montpellier 2) verified this prediction in a study published
online in the pre-print issue of the journal Animal Behaviour.
The investment of a father in the care and education of a child is a decisive
factor for the child's development, growth and even survival, particularly in
countries with high infant mortality. As this behavior is transmitted from
generation to generation, it can evolve by natural selection. Evolutionary
theory predicts that men should have developed the capacity to recognise their
biological children. This recognition of paternity can be made on the basis of
physical resemblance.
The study by the ISEM(1) team has shown for the first time that
paternal investment is partly influenced by genetically based similarities.
The study was conducted in several villages in Senegal, where the researchers
used a method that simultaneously quantified investment made by fathers and
their resemblance to their children. A total of thirty families, each with two
children, took part in the study. To quantify paternal investment, mothers
answered a questionnaire in which they had to estimate the time that the father
spent looking after the child, his attention, affection and even the money he
provided.
According to their answers, each father was assigned an investment index. A
separate group of people, who did not know these families, were chosen as
relatedness 'raters' to evaluate facial and olfactory resemblance between
children and fathers. For the faces, a photograph of each child was shown to the
raters, together with those of three men including the father. For odor, the
evaluator had to compare the odors of a tee-shirt worn by the child with those
of two men. Each time that the father was recognized, a point was attributed and
these results were collated to build a resemblance index.
A correlation was found between these resemblance indices and the paternal
investment as calculated from the questionnaire results. The study also clearly
confirmed the positive impact of a father's presence on the nutrition and growth
of the child. In this region, children who benefit from the presence of
their father clearly have better living conditions.
From the point of view of Darwinian theory, very few studies have been made
on the link between paternal investment and genetically based resemblance, and
none have been done with real families. Today, these results represent an
important step in the study of the evolution of paternal investment. The
ISEM team has also conducted a study on paternal investment in France from which
results will be published in the coming months.
1) Institut des sciences de l'évolution de Montpellier (CNRS / Université
de Montpellier)
Journal reference:
- Alvergne et al. Father-offspring resemblance predicts paternal
investment in humans. Animal Behaviour, May 28, 2009; DOI:
10.1016/j.anbehav.2009.03.019
Adapted from materials provided by CNRS.
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