Senescence, an organismal performance decline with age, has historically been considered a universal phenomenon by evolutionary biologists and zoologist. Yet, increasing fertility and survival with age are nothing new to plant ecologists, among whom it is common knowledge that senescence is not universal. Recently, these two realities have come into a confrontation, begging for the rephrasing of the classical question that has led ageing research for decades: “why do we senesce?” to a more practical “what are the mechanisms by which some organisms escape from senescence?” Plants are amenable to examining this question because of their rich repertoire of life history strategies. These include the existence of permanent seed banks, vegetative...
1. Research on senescence has largely focused on its underlying causes, and is concentrated on human...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Why do most organisms age, and why do most of them reproduce sexually? Does sex rejuvenate? We revie...
Senescence, an organismal performance decline with age, has historically been considered a universal...
Senescence, the physiological decline that results in decreasing survival and/or reproduction with a...
Until recently, senescence was assumed to be a universal phenomenon. Evolutionary theories of senesc...
The evolution of senescence (the physiological decline of organisms with age) poses an apparent para...
We applied four tests to detect evidence of the evolution of senescence in life tables and fecundity...
<p><strong>Life and death in the garden: trajectories of mortality and recruitment in plants.</stron...
It is known that many animal species senesce demographically, showing a decrease in survival and/or ...
1. Senescence (an increase in the mortality rate or force of mortality, or a decrease in fertility, ...
1. Senescence, the physiological decline that results in decreasing survival and/or reproduction wit...
<p>Until surprisingly recently many researchers claimed that senescence, defined as a decline in age...
The dominant evolutionary theory of actuarial senescence—an increase in death rate with advancing ag...
A population genetics model is developed predicting the fate of alleles affecting life-history attri...
1. Research on senescence has largely focused on its underlying causes, and is concentrated on human...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Why do most organisms age, and why do most of them reproduce sexually? Does sex rejuvenate? We revie...
Senescence, an organismal performance decline with age, has historically been considered a universal...
Senescence, the physiological decline that results in decreasing survival and/or reproduction with a...
Until recently, senescence was assumed to be a universal phenomenon. Evolutionary theories of senesc...
The evolution of senescence (the physiological decline of organisms with age) poses an apparent para...
We applied four tests to detect evidence of the evolution of senescence in life tables and fecundity...
<p><strong>Life and death in the garden: trajectories of mortality and recruitment in plants.</stron...
It is known that many animal species senesce demographically, showing a decrease in survival and/or ...
1. Senescence (an increase in the mortality rate or force of mortality, or a decrease in fertility, ...
1. Senescence, the physiological decline that results in decreasing survival and/or reproduction wit...
<p>Until surprisingly recently many researchers claimed that senescence, defined as a decline in age...
The dominant evolutionary theory of actuarial senescence—an increase in death rate with advancing ag...
A population genetics model is developed predicting the fate of alleles affecting life-history attri...
1. Research on senescence has largely focused on its underlying causes, and is concentrated on human...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Why do most organisms age, and why do most of them reproduce sexually? Does sex rejuvenate? We revie...