Abstract
Background: Global climate change and recent studies on early-life origins of well-being suggest that climate events early in life might affect health later in life.
Aim: The study tested hypotheses about the association between the level and variability of rain and temperature early in life on the height of children and adolescents in a foraging–farming society of native Amazonians in Bolivia (Tsimane').
Subject and methods: Measurements were taken for 525 children aged 2–12 and 218 adolescents aged 13–23 in 13 villages in 2005. Log of standing height was regressed on mean annual level and mean intra-annual monthly coefficient of variation (CV) of rain and mean annual level of temperature during gestation, birth year, and ages 2–4. Controls include age, quinquennium and season of birth, parent's attributes, and dummy variables for surveyors and villages.
Results: Climate variables were only related with the height of boys age 2–12. The level and CV of rain during birth year and the CV of rain and level of temperature during ages 2–4 were associated with taller stature. There were no secular changes in temperature (1973–2005) or rain (1943–2005).
Conclusion: The height of young females and males is well protected from climate events, but protection works less well for boys ages 2–12.
Notes
Notes
1. Rain data was purchased from the Administración de Aeropuertos y Servicios Auxiliares a la Navegación Aérea (AASANA); postal address: Calle Reyes Ortiz esquina Federico Suazo No. 74, Edificio FEDEPETROL 6°–14° Pisos, Casilla No 4382, La Paz, Bolivia; telephone: 591 2351 341, 591 2343 112; fax: 591 2342 731. We downloaded temperature data on February 2007, from the web site of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), USA Department of Commerce (http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/ncdc.html); postal address: NOAA, National Climatic Data Center, Federal Building, 151 Patton Avenue, Asheville NC 28801-5001, USA; telephone: 828-271-4800; fax: 828-271-4876; E-mail: [email protected].