Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes

Population growth in the next half-century is on pace to raise global carbon emissions by half. Carbon emissions are associated with fertility as a by-product of somatic and parental investment, which is predicted to involve time orientation/preference as a mediating psychological mechanism. Here, w...

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Main Authors: Mark Caudell, Robert Quinlan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160470
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spelling doaj-7d0447a3c8d64b48bd514e11fe23e3eb2020-11-25T03:41:02ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-0131110.1098/rsos.160470160470Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxesMark CaudellRobert QuinlanPopulation growth in the next half-century is on pace to raise global carbon emissions by half. Carbon emissions are associated with fertility as a by-product of somatic and parental investment, which is predicted to involve time orientation/preference as a mediating psychological mechanism. Here, we draw upon life-history theory (LHT) to investigate associations between future orientation and fertility, and their impacts on carbon emissions. We argue ‘K-strategy’ life history (LH) in high-income countries has resulted in parental investment behaviours involving future orientation that, paradoxically, promote unsustainable carbon emissions, thereby lowering the Earth's K or carrying capacity. Increasing the rate of approach towards this capacity are ‘r-strategy’ LHs in low-income countries that promote population growth. We explore interactions between future orientation and development that might slow the rate of approach towards global K. Examination of 67 000 individuals across 75 countries suggests that future orientation interacts with the relationship between environmental risk and fertility and with development related parental investment, particularly investment in higher education, to slow population growth and mitigate per capita carbon emissions. Results emphasize that LHT will be an important tool in understanding the demographic and consumption patterns that drive anthropogenic climate change.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160470life-history theoryclimate changeecological psychologysustainabilityenvironmental risk
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Caudell
Robert Quinlan
spellingShingle Mark Caudell
Robert Quinlan
Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
Royal Society Open Science
life-history theory
climate change
ecological psychology
sustainability
environmental risk
author_facet Mark Caudell
Robert Quinlan
author_sort Mark Caudell
title Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
title_short Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
title_full Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
title_fullStr Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
title_full_unstemmed Life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
title_sort life-history theory and climate change: resolving population and parental investment paradoxes
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Population growth in the next half-century is on pace to raise global carbon emissions by half. Carbon emissions are associated with fertility as a by-product of somatic and parental investment, which is predicted to involve time orientation/preference as a mediating psychological mechanism. Here, we draw upon life-history theory (LHT) to investigate associations between future orientation and fertility, and their impacts on carbon emissions. We argue ‘K-strategy’ life history (LH) in high-income countries has resulted in parental investment behaviours involving future orientation that, paradoxically, promote unsustainable carbon emissions, thereby lowering the Earth's K or carrying capacity. Increasing the rate of approach towards this capacity are ‘r-strategy’ LHs in low-income countries that promote population growth. We explore interactions between future orientation and development that might slow the rate of approach towards global K. Examination of 67 000 individuals across 75 countries suggests that future orientation interacts with the relationship between environmental risk and fertility and with development related parental investment, particularly investment in higher education, to slow population growth and mitigate per capita carbon emissions. Results emphasize that LHT will be an important tool in understanding the demographic and consumption patterns that drive anthropogenic climate change.
topic life-history theory
climate change
ecological psychology
sustainability
environmental risk
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160470
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