DOES INCREASED MORTALITY FAVOR THE EVOLUTION OF MORE RAPID SENESCENCE?
- 1 June 1993
- Vol. 47 (3) , 877-887
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1993.tb01241.x
Abstract
It is widely believed (following the 1957 hypothesis of G. C. Williams) that greater rates of "extrinsic" (age- and condition-independent) mortality favor more rapid senescence. However, a recent analysis of mammalian life tables failed to find a significant correlation between minimum adult mortality rate and the rate of senescence. This article presents a simple theoretical analysis of how extrinsic mortality should affect the rate of senescence (i.e., the rate at which probability of mortality increases with age) under different evolutionary and population dynamical assumptions. If population dynamics are density independent, extrinsic mortality should not alter the senescence rate favored by natural selection. If population growth is density dependent and populations are stable, the effect of extrinsic mortality depends on the age specificity of the density dependence and on whether survival or reproduction (or both) are functions of density. It is possible that higher extrinsic mortality will increase the rate of senescence at all ages, decrease the rate at all ages, or increase it at some ages while decreasing it at others. Williams's hypothesis is most likely to be supported when density dependence acts primarily on fertility and does not differentially decrease the fertilities of older individuals. Patterns contrary to Williams's prediction are possible when density dependence acts primarily on the survival or fertility of later ages or when most variation in mortality rates is due to variation in nonextrinsic mortality.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (BSR 8918646)
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The moulding of senescence by natural selectionPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Retarded senescence in an insular population of Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana)Journal of Zoology, 1993
- A New Bestiary for Aging ResearchScience, 1990
- Antagonistic Pleiotropy: An Interspecific Drosophila ComparisonEvolution, 1988
- The Adaptable OpossumScientific American, 1988
- Life table tests of evolutionary theories of senescenceExperimental Gerontology, 1988
- Selection for life span in Drosophila melanogasterHeredity, 1985
- Heterogeneity's Ruses: Some Surprising Effects of Selection on Population DynamicsThe American Statistician, 1985
- Costs of Reproduction: An Evaluation of the Empirical EvidenceOikos, 1985
- The Population Consequences of Life History PhenomenaThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1954