Science Visualized Animals What animals’ life spans can tell us about how people age By Sarah Zielinski 10:45am, July 13, 2016
ANIMAL INSIGHTS The longest lived individuals in particular species (dog: 29.5 years; cat: 38 years) make fun fodder for conversation. And the life spans of groups of related species can offer hints to human longevity.
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Magazine issue: Vol. 190, No. 2, July 23, 2016, p. 36
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To understand human longevity, look to the animal world, says James Carey, a biodemography specialist at the University of California, Davis. Studying other species, from insects to elephants, “provides important information for why we age and why we live as long as we do,” Carey says.
By looking at how long other organisms can live, Carey and other researchers have found some guiding principles for why some species flash in and out in days and others live for more than a century. For example, most groups of related organisms have similar maximum known life spans, Carey notes. Songbirds, such as the Eastern bluebird, generally live a maximum of eight to 10 years, for instance, while parrots (African gray parrot shown above) or raptors can survive for decades. Species can evolve so that they live a bit less or more than closely related species, but you probably won’t find a species of mouse that lives 100 years or a tortoise that dashes through life in a month. The graph below shows the longest-lived individuals for a selection of species — including many that make great fodder for cocktail party conversation (goldfish, anyone?).
Species that push the boundaries of their group’s typical life span provide insight into what can prompt the evolution of longevity, Carey says. Perhaps the species have evolved to survive rough, resource-poor conditions, such as the desert or deep ocean. Or they may be more like us, social animals that need time to let relationships play out.
Citations
J.R. Carey and D.S. Judge. Longevity Records. Oxford University Press. 2000.
D.A. Roach and J.R. Carey. Population biology of aging in the wild. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution and Systematics. Vol. 45, November 2014, p. 421. doi: 10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-120213-091730.
Further Reading
S. Milius. Organisms age in myriad ways — and some might not even bother. Science News. Vol. 190, July 23, 2016, p. 26.
T. Saey. A health old age is the next best thing to immortality. Science News. Vol 190, July 23, 2016, p. 16.
L. Sanders. The brain"s blueprint for aging is set early in life. Science News. Vol. 190, July 23, 2016. p. 22.
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What animals’ life spans can tell us about how people age
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