Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 31, Issue 4 , Pages 289-297, July 2010

Sex differences in mushroom gathering: men expend more energy to obtain equivalent benefits

  • Luis Pacheco-Cobos

      Affiliations

    • Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Distrito Federal, Mexico
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding authors. Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, AP 70228, CP 04510, Distrito Federal, México.
  • ,
  • Marcos Rosetti

      Affiliations

    • Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Robotics, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
  • ,
  • Cecilia Cuatianquiz

      Affiliations

    • Centro Tlaxcala de Biología de la Conducta, Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala, México
  • ,
  • Robyn Hudson

      Affiliations

    • Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Distrito Federal, Mexico
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding authors. Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, AP 70228, CP 04510, Distrito Federal, México.

Received 5 May 2009; accepted 31 December 2009. published online 05 April 2010.

Abstract 

Some of the strongest evidence for sex differences in human cognition relate to spatial abilities, with men traditionally reported to outperform women. Recently, however, such differences have been shown to be task dependent. Supporting the argument that a critical factor selecting for sex differences in spatial abilities during human evolution is likely to have been the division of labor during the Pleistocene, evidence is accumulating that women excel on tasks appropriate to gathering immobile plant resources, while men excel on tasks appropriate to hunting mobile, unpredictable prey. Most research, with the exception of some recent experimental field studies, has been conducted in the laboratory, with little information available on how men and women actually forage under natural conditions. In a first study, we GPS-tracked the foraging pathways of 21 pairs of men and women from an indigenous Mexican community searching for mushrooms in a natural environment. Measures of costs, benefits and general search efficiency were analyzed and related to differences between the two sexes in foraging patterns. Although men and women collected similar quantities of mushrooms, men did so at significantly higher cost. They traveled further, to greater altitudes, and had higher mean heart rates and energy expenditure (kcal). They also collected fewer species and visited fewer collection sites. These findings are consistent with arguments in the literature that differences in spatial ability between the sexes are domain dependent, with women performing better and more readily adopting search strategies appropriate to a gathering lifestyle than men.

Keywords: Sex differences, Human foraging behavior, Mushroom gathering, GPS tracking, Nahuas, Mexico

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 Financial support was provided by CONACyT (188635, 53095, 187302) and by the Posgrado de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

PII: S1090-5138(10)00004-8

doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2009.12.008

Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 31, Issue 4 , Pages 289-297, July 2010