Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 23, Issue 3 , Pages 193-201, May 2002

Marriage and fatherhood are associated with lower testosterone in males

Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, 11 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

Received 24 October 2000; received in revised form 8 November 2001; accepted 7 December 2001.

Abstract 

In order to study the hormonal correlates of the tradeoff between mating and parenting effort in human males, we examined the salivary testosterone (T) levels of 58 Boston-area men who were either unmarried (n=29), married without children (n=14), or married with children (n=15). Additionally, we asked participants to complete a questionnaire that surveyed their demographic, marital, and parenting backgrounds. We tested the hypotheses that (1) T levels will be lower in married than in unmarried men and (2) married men with children will have lower T levels than unmarried men and married men without children. We also tested a series of hypotheses relating variation in parenting and spousal relationships to T. We found that married men with and without children had significantly lower evening T than unmarried men. No significant differences in T were found among the groups in morning samples. Among married men without children, higher scores on a “spousal investment” measure and more hours spent with a man's wife on his last day off work were both associated with lower T levels. We suggest that lower T levels during the day among fathers may facilitate paternal care in humans by decreasing the likelihood that a father will engage in competitive and/or mating behavior.

Keywords:  Testosterone, Marriage, Fatherhood, Paternal care, Mating effort, Parenting effort, Challenge hypothesis

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PII: S1090-5138(01)00101-5

Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 23, Issue 3 , Pages 193-201, May 2002