Extra-pair copulation in men has been explained as being partly due to parental investment. Research has suggested that copulation poses more of a risk to future investment for women, as they have the potential of becoming pregnant, and consequently require a large parental investment of the
gestation period, and then further rearing of the offspring. Contrastingly, men are able to copulate and then abandon their mate as there is no risk of pregnancy for themselves, meaning there is a smaller risk of parental investment in any possible offspring. It has been suggested that, due to having such low parental investment, it is evolutionarily adaptive for men to copulate with as many women as possible. This will allow males to spread their genes with little risk of future investment but it does come with the increased risk of
sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Various factors can increase the probability of EPC in males. Firstly, males with low levels of
fluctuating asymmetry are more likely to have EPCs. This may be due to the fact that signals of low fluctuating asymmetry suggest that the males have "good genes", making females more likely to copulate with them as it will enhance the genes of their offspring, even if they do not expect long-term commitment from the male. Psychosocial stress early on in life, including behaviours such as physical violence and substance abuse, can predict EPC in later life. This has been explained as being due to
Life History Theory, which argues that individuals who are reared in environments where resources are scarce and
life expectancy is low, are more likely to engage in reproductive behaviours earlier in life in order to ensure the proliferation of their genes. Individuals reared in these environments are said to have short life histories. With respect to Life History Theory, these findings have been explained by suggesting that males who experienced
psychosocial stress early in life have short life histories, making them more likely to try and reproduce as much as possible by engaging in EPC to avoid gene extinction. Despite the possibility of increased reproductive success resulting from EPC, there are risks associated with the behavior. For example, costs may include discovery of sexual behavior outside the pair bond, with the risk of breakdown of the relationship with a long-term partner; in some cases, a discovered EPC leads to violence from partners. Men may also refrain from EPC to minimize risk of STI transmission which can be common in EPCs. The extra-pair partners in the EPC may have a higher number of sexual partners and therefore be at greater risk of STIs; this would counter the lower incidence of STI transmission among sexually exclusive, monogamous couples. Mitigating against improved reproductive success from EPC is the loss of enhanced child-rearing environments for any resulting offspring. In an evolutionary context, long-term pair-bonded couples would have greater success rearing children, increasing survival rates; offspring from EPC may have a reduced chance of survival in the absence of cooperative child-rearing from both parents, reducing the probability of the male's genes surviving to the next generation. ==In human females==