British scientists have discovered what any Mills and Boon reader could have told you: tall men are more attractive to women.
They've also found that tall women are more likely to be left on the shelf.
Details
The research suggests that men and women are unlikely ever to end up
the same height.
Not only do women prefer taller men, but men, it seems actively seek
out shorter women.
So, we're genetically selecting to keep height differences between the
sexes, rather than even them up.
In choosing a husband, size matters
Daniel Nettle, Open University
"It seems that tall men and petite women
are favoured in evolutionary terms, even in a modern population, so the
height difference between men and women is unlikely to disappear," says
Daniel Nettle of the Open University.
The verdict that size matters is based on a study of 10,000 people born
in the UK in a single week in March 1958.
Their health and social development has been followed for the National
Child Development Study.
Noakes: tall women don't do as well in job
interviews
Dr Nettle's team analysed data from the study in the year 2000 when the
men and women were aged 42.
He found the taller the men were, the less likely they were to be
single or childless.
A man of 1.83m (6'1") was more likely to have children than an average
man of 1.77m (5'8").
Women, though, were most likely to be married and have children if they
were below the average height of 1.62 m (5'3").
'Fertility cues'
The idea is that taller men are deemed more sexually attractive and are
more likely to find a mate.
In contrast, men look for "fertility cues" other than height in the
marriage stakes.
"We have come to think that men pay attention to physical
characteristics of their mates, whilst women pay more attention to status
and resources," says Dr Nettle.
"In the case of height, this is clearly not true; in choosing a
husband, size matters."
We are taught to look upon tall men and small
women as desirable
Adam Eyre-Walker, University of Sussex
Dr Nettle says shorter women appear to
have greater reproductive success partly because there is delayed
fertility among tall women.
Short women generally reach puberty earlier while the bodies of tall
women spend more energy on growing rather than entering puberty.
Also, tall women have a disadvantage because they have a smaller pool
to choose from if they want a man they won't tower over.
The finding will come as no surprise to evolutionary biologists.
Some have long postulated a positive link between male reproductive
success and lofty stature.
But not all scientists are convinced that genes are the driving force.
Cultural shift
There is no evidence that these choices are actually favoured in
evolutionary terms, says Adam Eyre-Walker from the Centre for the Study of
Evolution at the University of Sussex, Brighton.
He says the study was done on British people, so all we may be seeing
is the influence of culture.
"We are taught to look upon tall men and small women as desirable," he
told BBC News Online.
"This could be completely different in another culture (i.e. look at
the different attitudes to fatness in different cultures)."
He says another explanation is that tall men may not be intrinsically
more attractive, but they may be more successful.
While this makes them more attractive to a potential suitor, it may be
competition between males, not female choice, that is responsible.