Explaining the strong variation in lifespan among organisms remains a major challenge in evolutionary biology. Whereas previous work has concentrated mainly on differences in selection regimes and selection pressures, we hypothesize that differences in genetic drift may explain some of this variation. We develop a model to formalize this idea and show that the strong positive relationship between lifespan and genetic diversity predicted by this model indeed exists among populations of Daphnia magna, and that ageing is accelerated in small populations. Additional results suggest that this is due to increased drift in small populations rather than adaptation to environments favoring faster life histories: First, the correlation between geneti...
Genetic inheritance underpins evolutionary theories of aging, but the role that nongenetic inheritan...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Explaining the strong variation in lifespan among organisms remains a major challenge in evolutionar...
Explaining the strong variation in lifespan among organisms remains a major challenge in evolutionar...
SummaryAging, or senescence, defined as a decline in physiological function with age, has long been ...
Evolutionary theory of aging stipulates that aging is inevitable consequence of low effectiveness of...
1. The evolutionary theory of senescence predicts that increased rates of extrinsic mortality select...
Reduced population size is thought to have strong consequences for evolutionary processes as it enha...
Owen R. Jones et al.[EN] Evolution drives, and is driven by, demography. A genotype moulds its pheno...
The evolutionary explanation for lifespan variation is still based on the antagonistic pleiotropy hy...
Evolution drives, and is driven by, demography. A genotype moulds its phenotype\u27s age patterns of...
Ageing reduces fitness, but how ageing evolves is still unclear. Evolutionary theory of ageing hinge...
1. The environment can play an important role in the evolution of senescence because the optimal all...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Genetic inheritance underpins evolutionary theories of aging, but the role that nongenetic inheritan...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Explaining the strong variation in lifespan among organisms remains a major challenge in evolutionar...
Explaining the strong variation in lifespan among organisms remains a major challenge in evolutionar...
SummaryAging, or senescence, defined as a decline in physiological function with age, has long been ...
Evolutionary theory of aging stipulates that aging is inevitable consequence of low effectiveness of...
1. The evolutionary theory of senescence predicts that increased rates of extrinsic mortality select...
Reduced population size is thought to have strong consequences for evolutionary processes as it enha...
Owen R. Jones et al.[EN] Evolution drives, and is driven by, demography. A genotype moulds its pheno...
The evolutionary explanation for lifespan variation is still based on the antagonistic pleiotropy hy...
Evolution drives, and is driven by, demography. A genotype moulds its phenotype\u27s age patterns of...
Ageing reduces fitness, but how ageing evolves is still unclear. Evolutionary theory of ageing hinge...
1. The environment can play an important role in the evolution of senescence because the optimal all...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Genetic inheritance underpins evolutionary theories of aging, but the role that nongenetic inheritan...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...