机构:
Univ Western Ontario, Dept Anthropol, London, ON N6A 5C2, CanadaUniv Cambridge, Dept Archaeol, Downing St, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, England
Stock, Jay T.
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Wells, Jonathan C. K.
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机构:
UCL, UCL Great Ormond St Inst Child Hlth, Great Ormond St, London WC1N 3JH, EnglandUniv Cambridge, Dept Archaeol, Downing St, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, England
Worldwide variation in human stature and limb proportions is widely accepted to reflect thermal adaptation, but the contribution of population history to this variation is unknown. Furthermore, stature and relative lower limb length (LLL) show substantial plastic responses to environmental stressors, e.g., nutrition, pathogen load, which covary with climate. Thus ecogeographic patterns may go beyond temperature-based selection. We analysed global variation in stature, sitting height and absolute and relative LLL using large worldwide samples of published anthropometric data from adult male (n=571) and female (n=268) populations in relation to temperature, humidity, and net primary productivity (NPP). Population history was modeled using spatial eigenvector mapping based on geographic distances reflecting the hypothesized pattern for the spread of modern humans out of Africa. Regression models account for similar to 50% of variation in most morphological variables. Population history explains slightly more variation in stature, sitting height and LLL than the environmental/climatic variables. After adjusting for population history, associations between (usually maximum) temperature and LLL are consistent with Allen's "rule" and may drive similar relationships with stature. NPP is a consistent negative predictor of anthropometry, which may reflect the growth-limiting effects of lower environmental resource accessibility (inversely related to NPP) and/or pathogen load.