Industrial energy use and the human life history
   
Abstract
The demographic rates of most organisms are supported by the consumption of 
food energy, which is used to produce new biomass and fuel physiological 
processes. Unlike other species, modern humans use ‘extra-metabolic’ energy 
sources acquired independent of physiology, which also influence demographics. 
We ask whether the amount of extra-metabolic energy added to the energy budget 
affects demographic and life history traits in a predictable way. Currently it 
is not known how human demographics respond to energy use, and we characterize 
this response using an allometric approach. All of the human life history 
traits we examine are significant functions of per capita energy use across 
industrialized populations. We find a continuum of traits from those that 
respond strongly to the amount of extra-metabolic energy used, to those that 
respond with shallow slopes. We also show that the differences in plasticity 
across traits can drive the net reproductive
 rate to below-replacement levels.
 
entire paper here
http://www.nature.com/srep/2011/110805/srep00056/full/srep00056.html?WT.mc_id=FBK_SciReports

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