To avoid extinction, we may need to have more babies

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Japanese and Filipino researchers developed computer simulations of human population growth, and say these suggest our survival as a species requires every woman of childbearing age on Earth to have an average of at least 2.7 kids - much higher than the 2.1 kids we previously thought would keep us going. The researchers say the previous rate of 2.1 kids per woman does not account for random differences in how many kids people have, as well as death rates, gender ratios and the fact that some people never have children. They say their research shows each woman needs to have at least 2.7 children to reliably avoid eventual extinction, especially in populations that are already small.

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From: PLOS

2.1 kids per woman might not be enough for population survival

New research reveals that small population sizes and random birth patterns raise the fertility threshold needed to avoid extinction

Human populations need at least 2.7 children per woman – a much higher fertility rate than previously believed – to reliably avoid long-term extinction, according to a new study published April 30, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One by Takuya Okabe of Shizuoka University, Japan, and colleagues.

While a fertility rate of 2.1 children per woman is often considered the replacement level needed to sustain a population, this figure doesn’t account for random differences in how many children people have – as well as mortality rates, sex ratios, and the probability that some adults never have children. In small populations, these chance variations can wipe out entire family lineages. In the new study, researchers used mathematical models to examine how this demographic variability affects the survival of populations over many generations.

The study found that, due to random fluctuations in birth numbers, a fertility rate of at least 2.7 children per woman is needed to reliably avoid eventual extinction – especially in small populations. However, a female-biased birth ratio, with more females than males born, reduces the extinction risk, helping more lineages survive over time. This insight may help explain a long-observed evolutionary phenomenon: under severe conditions – such as war, famine, or environmental disruption – more females tend to be born than males. It also suggests that, while extinction isn’t imminent in large developed populations, most family lineages will eventually fade out.

The authors conclude that true population sustainability – as well as the sustainability of languages, cultural traditions, and diverse family lineages – requires rethinking conventional fertility targets. The findings also have implications for conservation efforts of endangered species in which target fertility rates are set, they point out.

Diane Carmeliza N. Cuaresma adds, "Considering stochasticity in fertility and mortality rates, and sex ratios, a fertility rate higher than the standard replacement level is necessary to ensure sustainability of our population."

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PLOS One
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Organisation/s: Shizuoka University, Japan
Funder: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI grant nos. 23KK0210 and 21H01575 (HI), 21K21115 (HA), 21K03387 (SM), and 21K12047 (TO)
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