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Population changes in St Kilda during the 19th and 20th centuries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 July 2008
Summary
During the century before its final evacuation in 1930 the population of St Kilda declined from over 100 to 36. While undoubtedly emigration and natural disasters played a part in this depopulation, ongoing processes were also important. In particular, replacement levels were never sufficient to maintain a constant population size. In the early part of this period the main factor responsible was heavy neonatal mortality, almost all from tetanus (‘eight-day sickness’), but latterly the fertility of those who survived was low, even though mortality rates had declined. In part at least, this decline in fertility could be ascribed to a lower frequency of marriage—a phenomenon seen elsewhere in the Outer Hebrides during the latter part of the 19th century.
Estimates of the opportunity for selective pressure on the population suggest very high levels, due earlier mainly to high pre-reproductive mortality and later to lowered fertility.
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