• About us
  • Contact us
  • Donate
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
No Result
View All Result
Modre News
Sunday, July 3, 2022
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Business
  • Education
  • News
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • shopping news
  • Movie
  • Hotels
  • Cooking
  • Music
  • Fashion
  • World
Modre News
No Result
View All Result
Home News Science

Secrets of aging revealed in largest study on longevity, aging in reptiles and amphibians — ScienceDaily

admin by admin
June 23, 2022
in Science
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


At 190 years old, Jonathan the Seychelles giant tortoise recently made news for being the “oldest living land animal in the world.” Although, anecdotal evidence like this exists that some species of turtles and other ectotherms — or ‘cold-blooded’ animals — live a long time, evidence is spotty and mostly focused on animals living in zoos or a few individuals living in the wild. Now, an international team of 114 scientists, led by Penn State and Northeastern Illinois University, reports the most comprehensive study of aging and longevity to date comprising data collected in the wild from 107 populations of 77 species of reptiles and amphibians worldwide.

Among their many findings, which they report today (June 23) in the journal Science, the researchers documented for the first time that turtles, crocodilians and salamanders have particularly low aging rates and extended lifespans for their sizes. The team also found that protective phenotypes, such as the hard shells of most turtle species, contribute to slower aging, and in some cases even ‘negligible aging’ — or lack of biological aging.

“Anecdotal evidence exists that some reptiles and amphibians age slowly and have long lifespans, but until now no one has actually studied this on a large scale across numerous species in the wild,” said David Miller, senior author and associate professor of wildlife population ecology, Penn State. “If we can understand what allows some animals to age more slowly, we can better understand aging in humans, and we can also inform conservation strategies for reptiles and amphibians, many of which are threatened or endangered.”

In their study, the researchers applied comparative phylogenetic methods — which enable investigation of organisms’ evolution — to mark-recapture data — in which animals are captured, tagged, released back into the wild and observed. Their goal was to analyze variation in ectotherm aging and longevity in the wild compared to endotherms (warm-blooded animals) and explore previous hypotheses related to aging — including mode of body temperature regulation and presence or absence of protective physical traits.

Miller explained that the ‘thermoregulatory mode hypothesis’ suggests that ectotherms — because they require external temperatures to regulate their body temperatures and, therefore, often have lower metabolisms — age more slowly than endotherms, which internally generate their own heat and have higher metabolisms.

“People tend to think, for example, that mice age quickly because they have high metabolisms, whereas turtles age slowly because they have low metabolisms,” said Miller.

The team’s findings, however, reveal that ectotherms’ aging rates and lifespans range both well above and below the known aging rates for similar-sized endotherms, suggesting that the way an animal regulates its temperature — cold-blooded versus warm-blooded — is not necessarily indicative of its aging rate or lifespan.

“We didn’t find support for the idea that a lower metabolic rate means ectotherms are aging slower,” said Miller. “That relationship was only true for turtles, which suggests that turtles are unique among ectotherms.”

The protective phenotypes hypothesis suggests that animals with physical or chemical traits that confer protection — such as armor, spines, shells or venom — have slower aging and greater longevity. The team documented that these protective traits do, indeed, enable animals to age more slowly and, in the case of physical protection, live much longer for their size than those without protective phenotypes.

“It could be that their altered morphology with hard shells provides protection and has contributed to the evolution of their life histories, including negligible aging — or lack of demographic aging — and exceptional longevity,” said Anne Bronikowski, co-senior author and professor of integrative biology, Michigan State.

Beth Reinke, first author and assistant professor of biology, Northeastern Illinois University, further explained, “These various protective mechanisms can reduce animals’ mortality rates because they’re not getting eaten by other animals. Thus, they’re more likely to live longer, and that exerts pressure to age more slowly. We found the biggest support for the protective phenotype hypothesis in turtles. Again, this demonstrates that turtles, as a group, are unique.”

Interestingly, the team observed negligible aging in at least one species in each of the ectotherm groups, including in frogs and toads, crocodilians and turtles.

“It sounds dramatic to say that they don’t age at all, but basically their likelihood of dying does not change with age once they’re past reproduction,” said Reinke.

Miller added, “Negligible aging means that if an animal’s chance of dying in a year is 1% at age 10, if it is alive at 100 years, it’s chance of dying is still 1% (1). By contrast, in adult females in the U.S., the risk of dying in a year is about 1 in 2,500 at age 10 and 1 in 24 at age 80. When a species exhibits negligible senescence (deterioration), aging just doesn’t happen.”

Reinke noted that the team’s novel study was only possible because of the contributions of a large number of collaborators from across the world studying a wide variety of species.

“Being able to bring these authors together who have all done years and years of work studying their individual species is what made it possible for us to get these more reliable estimates of aging rate and longevity that are based on population data instead of just individual animals,” she said.

Bronikowski added, “Understanding the comparative landscape of aging across animals can reveal flexible traits that may prove worthy targets for biomedical study related to human aging.”

For a list of authors and their affiliations, please see the published manuscript in Science.

The National Institutes of Health supported this research.

(1) U.S. Social Security Actuarial Life Table. https://www.ssa.gov/oact/STATS/table4c6.html#fn1 Accessed June 1, 2022



Source link

Previous Post

Toyota recalls nearly 3,000 bZ4X EVs over potentially deadly wheel defect

Next Post

Bandits, residents reach peace pact in Niger State

admin

admin

Related Posts

Science

Shrimps and worms among first animals to recover after largest mass extinction — ScienceDaily

July 1, 2022
Science

Capturing the onset of galaxy rotation in the early universe — ScienceDaily

July 1, 2022
Science

Thriving in a series of sudden global chills that killed competitors — ScienceDaily

July 1, 2022
Science

Nature used 57 recipes to create Earth’s 10,500-plus ‘mineral kinds’ — ScienceDaily

July 1, 2022
Science

Gemini North spies ultra-faint fossil galaxy discovered on outskirts of Andromeda — ScienceDaily

June 30, 2022
Science

Scientists have developed a new class of energy-dense biofuels based on one of nature’s most unique molecules — ScienceDaily

June 30, 2022
Next Post

Bandits, residents reach peace pact in Niger State

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected test

  • 79.5k Followers
  • 23.6k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Shanghai lockdown: The hard life of a homeless deliveryman

May 2, 2022

Shanghai: Authorities fire four officials after elderly patient blunder

May 3, 2022

How Covid-scarred Shanghai will finally exit lockdown

May 4, 2022

No, the Olympics’ big air ski jump isn’t next to a Beijing nuclear power plant

February 8, 2022

Realme 9i specs and renders leak ahead of January 10 announcement

156

The Oppo Pad will support 33W fast charging, gets a 3C certification

111

Google finally pushes OTA update to Pixel 6 and 6 Pro after botched December update

95

OnePlus 10 series to arrive with HyperBoost GPU tech

81

Kwara to recruit 197 medical personnel, health workers

July 3, 2022
What’s Next For Samsung? 6 Exciting Gadgets We Want to See in 2022

Samsung Should Forget the Galaxy S22 FE. Here’s Why

July 3, 2022

Week 26 in review: Xiaomi 12S Ultra is bringing a 1-inch sensor on July 4

July 3, 2022

Attacks: Anglican Bishop, Senator differ on church protection

July 3, 2022

Recent News

Kwara to recruit 197 medical personnel, health workers

July 3, 2022
What’s Next For Samsung? 6 Exciting Gadgets We Want to See in 2022

Samsung Should Forget the Galaxy S22 FE. Here’s Why

July 3, 2022

Week 26 in review: Xiaomi 12S Ultra is bringing a 1-inch sensor on July 4

July 3, 2022

Attacks: Anglican Bishop, Senator differ on church protection

July 3, 2022

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Apps
  • Asianews
  • Business
  • Business
  • Cooking
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Gadget
  • Gaming
  • Health
  • Hotels
  • Latest News
  • Lifestyle
  • Mobile
  • Movie
  • Music
  • News
  • Politics
  • Science
  • shopping news
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel news
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent News

Kwara to recruit 197 medical personnel, health workers

July 3, 2022
What’s Next For Samsung? 6 Exciting Gadgets We Want to See in 2022

Samsung Should Forget the Galaxy S22 FE. Here’s Why

July 3, 2022
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Donate
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2022 Modrenews.com - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Sports
  • Latest News
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • News
  • World
  • Tech
  • Business
  • Gadget
  • Mobile
  • Asianews

Copyright © 2022 Modrenews.com - All Rights Reserved.