Sociality, age at first reproduction and senescence: comparative analyses of birds
- 1 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Evolutionary Biology
- Vol. 19 (3) , 682-689
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2005.01065.x
Abstract
Evolutionary theories of senescence suggest that aging evolves as a consequence of early reproduction imposing later viability costs, or as a consequence of weak selection against mutations that act late in life. In addition, highly social species that live in sites that are protected from extrinsic mortality due to predation should senesce at a slower rate than solitary species. Therefore, species that start reproducing late in life should senesce at a slower rate than species that start reproducing early. In addition, social species should senesce more slowly than solitary species. Here I investigate the rate of senescence using an extensive data set on longevity records under natural field conditions to test predictions about the evolution of senescence among 271 species of birds. Longevity records increased with sampling effort and body mass, but once these confounding variables were controlled statistically, there was a strongly positive relationship between relative longevity and relative adult survival rate. Relative longevity after controlling statistically for sampling effort, body mass and adult survival rate, increased with age at first reproduction, but not with degree of breeding sociality. These findings suggest that the evolution of senescence is related to timing of first reproduction, but that the evolution of breeding sociality has played a negligible role in the evolution of senescence.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- The moulding of senescence by natural selectionPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Assessing the passerine “Tapestry”: phylogenetic relationships of the Muscicapoidea inferred from nuclear DNA sequencesMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2004
- Phylogeny of shorebirds, gulls, and alcids (Aves: Charadrii) from the cytochrome-b gene: parsimony, Bayesian inference, minimum evolution, and quartet puzzlingMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2004
- A phylogenetic hypothesis for passerine birds: taxonomic and biogeographic implications of an analysis of nuclear DNA sequence dataProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Mammalian metabolism, longevity and parasite species richnessProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2000
- An Introduction to Phylogenetically Based Statistical Methods, with a New Method for Confidence Intervals on Ancestral ValuesAmerican Zoologist, 1999
- Parasites, Bright Males, and the Immunocompetence HandicapThe American Naturalist, 1992
- Direct and Correlated Responses to Selection on Age at Reproduction in Drosophila melanogasterEvolution, 1992
- Senescence in Natural Populations of Mammals: A Comparative StudyEvolution, 1991
- Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 1985