Publication | Open Access
Sex difference in travel is concentrated in adolescence and tracks reproductive interests
42
Citations
32
References
2014
Year
Breeding BehaviorTeenage PregnancyFitnessLifetime DistanceReproductive HealthSexual SelectionTravel BehaviorSexual Selection TheorySocial SciencesGender IdentityGender StudiesPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthReproductive SuccessBehavioral SciencesSex DifferenceSexual BehaviorSexual HealthEvolutionary BiologySociologyDemographyAnimal BehaviorHuman SexualityLife Course
Sexual selection theory suggests that the sex with a higher potential reproductive rate will compete more strongly for access to mates. Stronger intra-sexual competition for mates may explain why males travel more extensively than females in many terrestrial vertebrates. A male-bias in lifetime distance travelled is a purported human universal, although this claim is based primarily on anecdotes. Following sexual maturity, motivation to travel outside the natal territory may vary over the life course for both sexes. Here, we test whether travel behaviour among Tsimane forager-horticulturalists is associated with shifting reproductive priorities across the lifespan. Using structured interviews, we find that sex differences in travel peak during adolescence when men and women are most intensively searching for mates. Among married adults, we find that greater offspring dependency load is associated with reduced travel among women, but not men. Married men are more likely to travel alone than women, but only to the nearest market town and not to other Tsimane villages. We conclude that men's and women's travel behaviour reflects differential gains from mate search and parenting across the life course.
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