The dominant evolutionary theory of actuarial senescence—an increase in death rate with advancing age—is based on the concept of a germ cell line that is separated from the somatic cells early in life. However, such a separation is not clear in all organisms. This has been suggested to explain the paucity of evidence for actuarial senescence in plants. We used a 32 year study of Dactylorhiza lapponica that replaces its organs each growing season, to test whether individuals of this tuberous orchid senesce. We performed a Bayesian survival trajectory analysis accounting for reproductive investment, for individuals under two types of land use, in two climatic regions. The mortality trajectory was best approximated by a Weibull model, showing ...
Patterns of actuarial senescence can be highly variable among species. Previous comparative analyses...
1. As they grow old, most organisms experience progressive physiological deterioration result-ing in...
1. As they grow old, most organisms experience progressive physiological deterioration resulting in ...
The dominant evolutionary theory of actuarial senescence—an increase in death rate with advancing ag...
We applied four tests to detect evidence of the evolution of senescence in life tables and fecundity...
Demographic senescence, the decay in fertility and increase in the risk of mortality with age, is on...
Senescence, an organismal performance decline with age, has historically been considered a universal...
<p><strong>Life and death in the garden: trajectories of mortality and recruitment in plants.</stron...
Senescence is characterized by a decline in survival, fecundity and reproductive value with age amon...
Senescence (an increase in the mortality rate or force of mortality, or a decrease in fertility, wit...
The evolution of senescence (the physiological decline of organisms with age) poses an apparent para...
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...
1. Senescence (an increase in the mortality rate or force of mortality, or a decrease in fertility, ...
It is known that many animal species senesce demographically, showing a decrease in survival and/or ...
Patterns of actuarial senescence can be highly variable among species. Previous comparative analyses...
1. As they grow old, most organisms experience progressive physiological deterioration result-ing in...
1. As they grow old, most organisms experience progressive physiological deterioration resulting in ...
The dominant evolutionary theory of actuarial senescence—an increase in death rate with advancing ag...
We applied four tests to detect evidence of the evolution of senescence in life tables and fecundity...
Demographic senescence, the decay in fertility and increase in the risk of mortality with age, is on...
Senescence, an organismal performance decline with age, has historically been considered a universal...
<p><strong>Life and death in the garden: trajectories of mortality and recruitment in plants.</stron...
Senescence is characterized by a decline in survival, fecundity and reproductive value with age amon...
Senescence (an increase in the mortality rate or force of mortality, or a decrease in fertility, wit...
The evolution of senescence (the physiological decline of organisms with age) poses an apparent para...
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...
1. Senescence (an increase in the mortality rate or force of mortality, or a decrease in fertility, ...
It is known that many animal species senesce demographically, showing a decrease in survival and/or ...
Patterns of actuarial senescence can be highly variable among species. Previous comparative analyses...
1. As they grow old, most organisms experience progressive physiological deterioration result-ing in...
1. As they grow old, most organisms experience progressive physiological deterioration resulting in ...