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Mothers with higher twinning propensity had lower fertility in pre-industrial Europe

Rickard Ian J.; Vullioud Colin; Rousset François; Postma Erik; Helle Samuli; Lummaa Virpi; Kylli Ritva; Pettay Jenni E.; Røskaft Eivin; Skjærvø Gine R.; Störmer Charlotte; Voland Eckart; Waldvogel Dominique; Courtiol Alexandre

Mothers with higher twinning propensity had lower fertility in pre-industrial Europe

Rickard Ian J.
Vullioud Colin
Rousset François
Postma Erik
Helle Samuli
Lummaa Virpi
Kylli Ritva
Pettay Jenni E.
Røskaft Eivin
Skjærvø Gine R.
Störmer Charlotte
Voland Eckart
Waldvogel Dominique
Courtiol Alexandre
Katso/Avaa
s41467-022-30366-9.pdf (889.3Kb)
Lataukset: 

Nature Publishing Group
doi:10.1038/s41467-022-30366-9
URI
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-30366-9
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022081154737
Tiivistelmä
Historically, mothers producing twins gave birth, on average, more often than non-twinners. This observation has been interpreted as twinners having higher intrinsic fertility - a tendency to conceive easily irrespective of age and other factors - which has shaped both hypotheses about why twinning persists and varies across populations, and the design of medical studies on female fertility. Here we show in >20k pre-industrial European mothers that this interpretation results from an ecological fallacy: twinners had more births not due to higher intrinsic fertility, but because mothers that gave birth more accumulated more opportunities to produce twins. Controlling for variation in the exposure to the risk of twinning reveals that mothers with higher twinning propensity - a physiological predisposition to producing twins - had fewer births, and when twin mortality was high, fewer offspring reaching adulthood. Twinning rates may thus be driven by variation in its mortality costs, rather than variation in intrinsic fertility.
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