1st Edition

Dynamics of Human Reproduction Biology, Biometry, Demography

By James W. Wood Copyright 1994
    670 Pages
    by Routledge

    670 Pages
    by Routledge

    Awarded the W. W. Howells Award for the Outstanding Book in Biological Anthropology, this volume presents a comprehensive, integrated, and up-to-date overview of the major physiological and behavioral factors affecting human reproduction. In attempting to identify the most important causes of variation in fertility within and among human populations, Wood summarizes data from a wide range of societies. Trained as an anthropologist as well as a demographer, he devotes special attention to so-called "natural fertility" populations, in which modern contraceptives and induced abortion are not used to limit reproductive output. Such an emphasis enables him to study the interaction of biology and behavior with particular clarity.

    The volume weaves together the physiological, demographic, and biometric approaches to human fertility in a way that will encourage future interdisciplinary research. Instead of offering a general overview, the focus is to answer one question: Why does fertility and the number of live births vary from couple to couple within any particular population, and from population to population across the human species as a whole?

    Topics covered include ovarian function, conception and pregnancy, intrauterine mortality, reproductive maturation and senescence, coital frequency and the waiting time to conception, marriage patterns and the initiation of reproduction, the fertility-reducing effects of breastfeeding, the impact of maternal nutrition on reproduction, and reproductive seasonality. This unique combination of comprehensive subject matter and an integrated analytical approach makes the book ideally suited both as a graduate-level textbook and as a reference work.

    I: Natural Fertility; 1: Introduction; 2: Patterns of Natural Fertility; 3: Frameworks for Analyzing the Determinants of Natural Fertility; II: The Proximate Determinants of Natural Fertility; 4: Ovarian Cycles and the Fertile Period; 5: Conception, Implantation, and Pregnancy; 6: Fetal Loss; 7: Fecundability and Coital Frequency; 8: Breastfeeding and Postpartum Infecundability; 9: Menarche and Menopause; 10: The Onset of Permanent Sterility; 11: Marriage and the Male Contribution; III: Beyond the Proximate Determinants; 12: Extensions and Elaborations

    Biography

    James W. Wood