But extra-pair paternity rates differ across population density, income, and paternal place of work. Rates are up to 5% for lowest SES men who work away from a big-city home.pic.twitter.com/SyttAfI4cy
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But extra-pair paternity rates differ across population density, income, and paternal place of work. Rates are up to 5% for lowest SES men who work away from a big-city home.pic.twitter.com/SyttAfI4cy
Interesting comment from @tavitonst that genetic data from the Himba show EPP rates up to 50%! A cross-cultural perspective is so important.
Was there any rise with relaxation of social stigma?
This was interpreted as more to do with increased population density and urbanisation, but could also reflect social norms?pic.twitter.com/qOr4WSIj30
Thanks 
@RationalMale Our review based on this data is published in TREE:http://www.cell.com/trends/ecology-evolution/fulltext/S0169-5347(16)00070-7 …
The genomic record shows the Pareto principle is active in women’s sexual strategies.
Do have any studies from Canada on non-paternity? Thank you
@lizmurphy68 A thorough analysis to estimate the historical EPP-rate from the BALSAC database is currently going on by our forensic colleagues from Québec.
Thank you very much. I have seen many non-paternity studies but none from Canada so far. I suspect the rate for Canada will also be low as it has been for other Western countries.
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