Frontier populations provide exceptional opportunities to test the hypothesis of a trade-off between fertility and longevity. In such populations, mechanisms favoring reproduction usually find fertile ground, and if these mechanisms reduce longevity, demographers should observe higher postreproductive mortality among highly fertile women. We test this hypothesis using complete female reproductive histories from three large demographic databases: the Registre de la population du Québec ancien (Université de Montréal), which covers the first centuries of settlement in Quebec; the BALSAC database (Université du Québec à Chicoutimi), including comprehensive records for the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean (SLSJ) in Quebec in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; and the Utah Population Database (University of Utah), including all individuals who experienced a vital event on the Mormon Trail and their descendants. Together, the three samples allow for comparisons over time and space, and represent one of the largest set of natural fertility cohorts used to simultaneously assess reproduction and longevity. Using survival analyses, we found a negative influence of parity and a positive influence of age at last child on postreproductive survival in the three populations, as well as a significant interaction between these two variables. The effect sizes of all these parameters were remarkably similar in the three samples. However, we found little evidence that early fertility affects postreproductive survival. The use of Heckman’s procedure assessing the impact of mortality selection during reproductive ages did not appreciably alter these results. We conclude our empirical investigation by discussing the advantages of comparative approaches. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 21:533–540, 2009.
The aim of this paper is to account for the effect of mother's death on child survival in a historical population. Using comprehensive data on the early French Canadian population of Quebec, evidence is provided for a higher risk of dying for motherless children that remains significant over all childhood and long after the death of the mother. The specific effect of the loss of maternal care was estimated by comparing mortality before and after mother's death, furnishing a means to control for family heterogeneity. No differential in investment between genders was detected before age 3, but older girls suffered a three-fold higher susceptibility to mother's death than their male counterparts. This suggests that grown-up girls assuming the responsibilities of the missing mother had a lower chance of survival.
A recent workshop entitled ''The Family Name as Socio-Cultural Feature and Genetic Metaphor: From Concepts to Methods" was held in Paris in December 2010, sponsored by the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) and by the journal Human Biology. This workshop was intended to foster a debate on questions related to the family names and to compare different multidisciplinary approaches involving geneticists, historians, geographers, sociologists and social anthropologists. This collective paper presents a collection of selected communications.In 1983, Human Biology published a special May issue (volume 55, issue 2) devoted to surnames as tools to evaluate average consanguinity, to assess population isolation and structure, and to estimate the intensity and directionality of migrations. Major contributions written by scholars gave a special relevance to this special issue that remained, for many years, a reference (for a review see Lasker 1985; Colantonio et al. 2011).Since that time, many surname studies have focused on extending knowledge on population structure, isonymy, and migration (for an exhaustive synthesis see Colantonio et al. 2003) been applied to about thirty societies all around the world with a geographic scale that ranges from a household or village, to a whole continent. Further and quite recent research put forward a spectrum of methods to analyze Y-chromosome DNA polymorphisms, thus allowing the examination of the degree of cosegregation of family names and Y-chromosome haplotypes, at least in patrilineal naming practice.The workshop The Family Name as Socio-Cultural Feature and Genetic Metaphor: From Concepts to Methods (Paris, France, 5-6 December, 2010) was organized to go further and, even if some presentations were focused towards more classical research, to pinpoint some particularly innovative aspects of current surname research. This summary article is meant to be a synthesis of the papers presented during the workshop; there are two main strands.The first research direction relies on the use of surname databases that are increasingly exhaustive and easy to analyse thanks to the spread of digital techniques. In this respect, Pablo Mateos, James Cheshire and Paul Longley's UCL Worldnames database (which includes about 6 million surnames registered in 26 different countries, http://worldnames.publicprofiler.org/), constitutes an impressive quantity of information and an exciting tool for future research (Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives in the Spatial Analysis of Names, this article). Unfortunately, this large collection of data comes from different sources, such as national electoral registers or telephone directories, and problems of homogenization and representativeness need to be discussed further as they could not be addressed at the workshop. In the same way, long distance comparisons between stocks of surnames with very different historical and linguistic origins are also a challenge and deserve particular attention. The corpus of family names described by Ka...
Women giving birth at advanced reproductive ages in natural fertility conditions have been shown to have superior postmenopausal longevity. It is unknown whether improved survival is more likely among relatives of late-fertile women. This study compares survival past age 50 of men with and without a late-fertile sister in two populations: Utahns born in 1800-1869 identified from the Utah Population Database and Québec residents born in 1670-1750 identified from the Programme de recherche en démographie historique. Male survival was greater for those with, rather than without, a sister reproducing after age 45, particularly among men with at least three sisters (Utah rate ratio [RR] = .801, 95% CI = 0.687-0.940; Quebec RR = .786, 95% CI = 0.664-0.931). Survival of wives was unaffected by whether their husbands had a late-fertile sister, suggesting a weak influence of unmeasured socioenvironmental factors. These results support the hypothesis that late female fertility and slow somatic aging may be promoted by the same genetic variants.
Purpose. Political, national, religious, and other motivations have led the media and even scientists to errantly accept extreme longevity claims prima facie. We describe various causes of false claims of extraordinary longevity. Design and Methods. American Social Security Death Index files for the period 1980–2009 were queried for individuals with birth and death dates yielding ages 110+ years of age. Frequency was compared to a list of age-validated supercentenarians maintained by the Gerontology Research Group who died during the same time period. Age claims of 110+ years and the age validation experiences of the authors facilitated a list of typologies of false age claims. Results. Invalid age claim rates increase with age from 65% at age 110-111 to 98% by age 115 to 100% for 120+ years. Eleven typologies of false claims were: Religious Authority Myth, Village Elder Myth, Fountain of Youth Myth (substance), Shangri-La Myth (geographic), Nationalist Pride, Spiritual Practice, Familial Longevity, Individual and/or Family Notoriety, Military Service, Administrative Entry Error, and Pension-Social Entitlement Fraud. Conclusions. Understanding various causes of false extreme age claims is important for placing current, past, and future extreme longevity claims in context and for providing a necessary level of skepticism.
Cette étude présente une analyse des origines géographiques et de la contribution génétique des ancêtres fondateurs de la population du Québec. À l’aide de données tirées du ficher BALSAC et du Registre de la population du Québec ancien, un corpus de 2223 généalogies ascendantes couvrant l’ensemble du territoire québécois a été construit. Ces généalogies remontent jusqu’au 17e siècle et couvrent en moyenne plus de neuf générations. Tous les liens généalogiques unissant l’ensemble des individus identifiés dans les ascendances ont été établis. Les résultats indiquent qu’environ 81 pour cent du pool génique québécois s’explique par des fondatrices et fondateurs venus de France au 17e siècle. Des différences importantes existent toutefois selon le lieu d’origine en France et selon le sexe des fondateurs. Les résultats ont aussi mis en évidence la présence de nombreux liens d’apparentement éloigné dans cette population.This study analyzes the geographic origins and genetic contributions of the founding ancestors of the Québec population. The authors used data from the BALSAC population register and the Early Quebec population register to build a corpus of 2,223 ascending genealogies covering the entire territory of Québec. These genealogies go back to the 17th century and on average include more than 9 generations. Genealogical links between all individuals identified in the genealogies were established. Results show that approximately 81% of Québec’s gene pool derives from the founders who came from France in the 17th century. There are however important differences in founders’ genetic contribution according to gender and place of origin in France. Genealogical analyses also reveal the existence of many distant kinship ties within this population
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