HW 5 Migration Aging and Carrying Capacity (1)
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Anthropology
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Jan 9, 2024
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Anth 145 – Summer 2023 – Homework #5
Teen Pregnancy, Migration, Aging and Carrying Capacity
1.
Teenage pregnancy is associated with poor birth outcomes in the United States but early pregnancy has a
less of a detrimental effect in traditional societies or in developing countries.
[4 pts]
a.
What are some reasons why teen mothers in traditional small-scale societies suffer less in terms of
maternal mortality, child survival compared to developed nations with modern medical care?
[1 pt]
Teen mothers may suffer less because as a teen, the mothers’ bodies can more easily repair
themselves and may be healthier/more fit than at older ages. Because they are healthy, they are also
properly fit to care for their children.
b. What are some reasons why teen mothers in traditional small-scale societies suffer lower social and
economic costs of teen pregnancy, compared to developed nations with integrated market economies and
established social and educational institutions? [1 pt]
Traditional small-scale societies suffer lower in terms of teen pregnancy because it is socially acceptable to
bear children early and young mothers receive support from their family and community which minimizes
economic cost.
c.
What are some advantages to early motherhood?
[1 pt]
Some advantages include better birth outcomes, being healthy while caring for children, and more
opportunities to reproduce.
d.
Why is teen pregnancy negatively correlated with educational enrollment?
[1 pt]
Teen pregnancy is higher in nations where education enrollment is lower and teen pregnancy prevents
mothers from investing into their education because they are investing in caring for their children.
2.
Table E9-1 is a matrix showing U.S. regions of residence for those who migrated between 2011 and
2012, according to the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey. Define as an interregional
migrant anyone who had a different U.S. region of residence in 2012 than she or he reported for
2011. Answer the following questions
[7 pts]
:
a.
If someone was moving out of the South in 2012, what region were they most likely to move
to?
[1 pt]
They might move to the West, judging frome the migration pattern between 2011 and 2012
where the West was the most popular region for Southerners to migrate.
b.
The migration stream from the Northeast to the South had 362,000 people. How many were
in the migration stream from South to Northeast?
[1 pt]
The migration stream from the South to the Northeast was approximately 178,000 people.
c.
The volume of (gross) migration between the South and the Northeast was 540,000
people. What was the (gross) volume of migration between the Midwest and the South?
[1
pt]
The gross volume of migration between the Midwest and South was 677,000 people.
d.
The net migration from the Northeast to the South was plus 184,000. What was the net
migration from the South to the Northeast?
[1 pt]
The net migration from the South to the Northeast was -184,000.
e.
What was the net migration from the Midwest to the South?
[1 pt]
The net migration from the Midwest to the South was plus 69,000.
f.
More people moved to the South than anywhere else between 2011 and 2012. What was
the total net migration to the South in this period?
[1 pt]
Total net migration to the South was 164,000 people.
g.
Which region lost the most people during this period?
What was net migration from
this region? [1 pt]
Most people also migrated out of the South, with the net migration from the South being
901,000 people.
3.
Given what you know about the contribution of migration to population growth and the relative roles
of natural rate of increase (
B
t
–
D
t
) vs. net migration (
M
in
–
M
out
), which do you think will contribute
more to US population growth over the next decade and why?
[1 pt]
I think migration will contribute more to the population growth in the United States over the next
decade because the net migration is higher than the natural rate of increase.
4.
For demographers, the term senescence generally refers to actuarial senescence, which is observed
when mortality increases with age across later life. Theories for the evolution of senescence try to
explain why increased mortality at older ages could be favored by natural selection.
[3 pts]
a.
Antagonistic pleiotropy is one such explanation, which says that if two genes are inherited together but
one has beneficial effects and the other has detrimental effects, natural selection may favor
individuals with both these genes, given
what crucial element
in their expression?
[1 pt]
Natural selection favors the genes if the protective allele increases health in early life and allows
survival to reproduce and if the deleterious gene affects health later in life after reproduction.
b.
Another theory for the evolution of senescence is mutation accumulation, which predicts that
deleterious alleles that are expressed late in life may not be reduced by natural selection. What
does this theory have in common with antagonistic pleiotropy?
[1 pt]
Both of these theories state that natural selection considers the timing of when the genes express
themselves and that natural selection does not protect against genes that may have harmful effects
later in life.
c.
Disposable Soma theory also predicts increases in late-life mortality, but depends on zero-sum allocation
constraints favoring maintenance allocation insufficient for complete repair of damage. What would an
organism’s limited energy be allocated to instead?
[1 pt]
An organism’s energy may be allocated towards growth and reproduction instead because investment in
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