Given finite resources, intense investment in one life history trait is expected to reduce investment in others. Although telomere length appears to be strongly tied to age in many taxa, telomere maintenance requires energy. We therefore hypothesize that telomere maintenance may trade off against other life history characters. We used natural variation in laboratory populations of Atlantic silversides (Menidia menidia) to study the relationship between growth, fecundity, life expectancy, and relative telomere length. In keeping with several other studies on fishes, we found no clear dependence of telomere length on age. However, we did find that more fecund fish tended to have both reduced life expectancy and shorter telomeres. This result ...
Telomeres are specialized and highly repetitive noncoding DNA structures at the end of linear chromo...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres are protective caps at the end of chromosomes, and their length is positively correlated w...
Given finite resources, intense investment in one life history trait is expected to reduce investmen...
Telomeres are highly conserved nucleoprotein structures which protect genome integrity. The length o...
A larger body size confers many benefits, such as increased reproductive success, ability to evade p...
Telomeres, the protective caps at the ends of all vertebrate chromosomes, naturally undergo changes ...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres are chromosomal elements that protect and maintain genes as DNA replicates in many organis...
TelTelomeres usually shorten during an organism’s lifespan and have thus been used as an aging and h...
Background: Individuals rarely grow as fast as their physiologies permit despite the fitness advanta...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres, the repetitive DNA sequences that cap eukaryotic chromosomes, are thought to play an impo...
Telomeres have been advocated to be important markers of biological age in evolutionary and ecologic...
Telomeres are specialized and highly repetitive noncoding DNA structures at the end of linear chromo...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres are protective caps at the end of chromosomes, and their length is positively correlated w...
Given finite resources, intense investment in one life history trait is expected to reduce investmen...
Telomeres are highly conserved nucleoprotein structures which protect genome integrity. The length o...
A larger body size confers many benefits, such as increased reproductive success, ability to evade p...
Telomeres, the protective caps at the ends of all vertebrate chromosomes, naturally undergo changes ...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres are chromosomal elements that protect and maintain genes as DNA replicates in many organis...
TelTelomeres usually shorten during an organism’s lifespan and have thus been used as an aging and h...
Background: Individuals rarely grow as fast as their physiologies permit despite the fitness advanta...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres, the repetitive DNA sequences that cap eukaryotic chromosomes, are thought to play an impo...
Telomeres have been advocated to be important markers of biological age in evolutionary and ecologic...
Telomeres are specialized and highly repetitive noncoding DNA structures at the end of linear chromo...
Individuals in free-living animal populations generally differ substantially in reproductive success...
Telomeres are protective caps at the end of chromosomes, and their length is positively correlated w...