Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population

Are daughters of older mothers less fertile? The human mutation rate is high and increases with chronological age. As female oocytes age, they become less functional, reducing female chances at successful reproduction. Increased oocyte mutation loads at advanced age may be passed on to offspring, d...

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Main Authors: Niels van den Berg, Ingrid K. van Dijk, Rick J. Mourits
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Instititute of Social History 2021-03-01
Series:Historical Life Course Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openjournals.nl/index.php/hlcs/article/view/9578
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spelling doaj-0725c352d1944a169a10eea9b0a86a4d2021-04-01T10:48:29ZengInternational Instititute of Social HistoryHistorical Life Course Studies2352-63432021-03-011010.51964/hlcs9578Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility PopulationNiels van den BergIngrid K. van DijkRick J. Mourits Are daughters of older mothers less fertile? The human mutation rate is high and increases with chronological age. As female oocytes age, they become less functional, reducing female chances at successful reproduction. Increased oocyte mutation loads at advanced age may be passed on to offspring, decreasing fertility among daughters born to older mothers. In this paper we study the effects of maternal ageing on her daughter's fertility, including total number of children, age at last birth, and neonatal mortality among her children. We study fertility histories of two generations of women from mutually exclusive families from a pre-demographic transition historical population in the Dutch province of Zeeland. Using mixed effect Poisson and linear models to take within family (sibling) relations into account, we show that among married daughters fertility is reduced for those who were born to mothers with an advanced maternal age, resulting in fewer children ever born and earlier ages at last birth. We do not find consistent evidence for effects on neonatal mortality. These results may indicate that women born to older mothers are negatively affected by their mothers' increased age. https://openjournals.nl/index.php/hlcs/article/view/9578FertilityReproductive ageingMutation loadMaternal ageFamily demographyFertility outcomes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niels van den Berg
Ingrid K. van Dijk
Rick J. Mourits
spellingShingle Niels van den Berg
Ingrid K. van Dijk
Rick J. Mourits
Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population
Historical Life Course Studies
Fertility
Reproductive ageing
Mutation load
Maternal age
Family demography
Fertility outcomes
author_facet Niels van den Berg
Ingrid K. van Dijk
Rick J. Mourits
author_sort Niels van den Berg
title Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population
title_short Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population
title_full Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population
title_fullStr Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population
title_full_unstemmed Women Born to Older Mothers Have Reduced Fertility. Evidence From a Natural Fertility Population
title_sort women born to older mothers have reduced fertility. evidence from a natural fertility population
publisher International Instititute of Social History
series Historical Life Course Studies
issn 2352-6343
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Are daughters of older mothers less fertile? The human mutation rate is high and increases with chronological age. As female oocytes age, they become less functional, reducing female chances at successful reproduction. Increased oocyte mutation loads at advanced age may be passed on to offspring, decreasing fertility among daughters born to older mothers. In this paper we study the effects of maternal ageing on her daughter's fertility, including total number of children, age at last birth, and neonatal mortality among her children. We study fertility histories of two generations of women from mutually exclusive families from a pre-demographic transition historical population in the Dutch province of Zeeland. Using mixed effect Poisson and linear models to take within family (sibling) relations into account, we show that among married daughters fertility is reduced for those who were born to mothers with an advanced maternal age, resulting in fewer children ever born and earlier ages at last birth. We do not find consistent evidence for effects on neonatal mortality. These results may indicate that women born to older mothers are negatively affected by their mothers' increased age.
topic Fertility
Reproductive ageing
Mutation load
Maternal age
Family demography
Fertility outcomes
url https://openjournals.nl/index.php/hlcs/article/view/9578
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