The Equivocal Mean Age of Parents in a Cohort
Authors/Creators
Description
The mean age at which parents give birth is an important notion in demography, ecology, and evolution, where it is used as a measure of generation time. A standard way to quantify it is to compute the mean age of the parents of all offspring produced by a cohort, and the resulting measure is thought to represent the mean age at which a typical parent produces offspring. In this note, I explain why this interpretation is problematic. I also introduce a new measure of the mean age at reproduction and show that it can be very different from the mean age of parents of offspring of a cohort. In particular, the mean age of parents of offspring of a cohort systematically overestimates the mean age at reproduction and can even be greater than the expected life span of parents.
Files
BienvenuAmNat2019.pdf
Files
(643.2 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:4cd28bde220c5a34f8d2b656e4e65f89
|
190.9 kB | Preview Download |
|
md5:70a85d296f2d2c79710866cb80612049
|
452.3 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Related works
- Is supplemented by
- 10.5281/zenodo.4126926 (DOI)