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Childhood ecology influences salivary testosterone, pubertal age and stature of Bangladeshi UK migrant men

Magid, Kesson; Chatterton, Robert T.; Ahamed, Farid Uddin; Bentley, Gillian R.

Childhood ecology influences salivary testosterone, pubertal age and stature of Bangladeshi UK migrant men Thumbnail


Authors

Profile image of Kesson Magid

Kesson Magid kesson.magid@durham.ac.uk
Honorary/Visiting/Emeritus

Robert T. Chatterton

Farid Uddin Ahamed



Abstract

Male reproductive investment is energetically costly, and measures of human reproductive steroid hormones (testosterone), developmental tempo (pubertal timing) and growth (stature) correlate with local ecologies at the population level. It is unclear whether male reproductive investment in later life is ‘set’ during childhood development, mediated through adulthood, or varies by ethnicity. Applying a life-course model to Bangladeshi migrants to the United Kingdom, here we investigate plasticity in human male reproductive function resulting from childhood developmental conditions. We hypothesized that childhood ecology shapes adult trade-offs between reproductive investment and/or other fitness-related traits. We predicted correspondence between these traits and developmental timing of exposure to ecological constraints (Bangladesh) or conditions of surplus (United Kingdom). We compared: Bangladesh sedentees (n = 107); Bangladeshi men who migrated in childhood to the United Kingdom (n = 59); migrants who arrived in adulthood (n = 75); second-generation UK-born and raised children of Bangladeshi migrants (n = 56); and UK-born ethnic Europeans (n = 62). Migration before puberty predicted higher testosterone and an earlier recalled pubertal age compared with Bangladeshi sedentees or adult migrants, with more pronounced differences in men who arrived before the age of eight. Second-generation Bangladeshis were taller, with higher testosterone than sedentees and adult migrants, and higher waking testosterone than Europeans. Age-related testosterone profiles varied by group, declining in UK migrants, increasing in sedentees, and having no significant relationship within UK-born groups. We conclude that male reproductive function apparently remains plastic late into childhood, is independent of Bengali or European ethnicity, and shapes physiological trade-offs later in life.

Citation

Magid, K., Chatterton, R. T., Ahamed, F. U., & Bentley, G. R. (2018). Childhood ecology influences salivary testosterone, pubertal age and stature of Bangladeshi UK migrant men. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 2(7), 1146-1154. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0567-6

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 1, 2018
Online Publication Date Jun 25, 2018
Publication Date Jun 25, 2018
Deposit Date Jul 6, 2018
Publicly Available Date Dec 25, 2018
Journal Nature Ecology and Evolution
Electronic ISSN 2397-334X
Publisher Nature Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Issue 7
Pages 1146-1154
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0567-6
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1326579

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