Abstract
Maternal senescence is the detrimental effect of increased maternal age on offspring performance. Despite much recent interest given to describing this phenomenon, its distribution across animal species is poorly understood. A review of the published literature finds that maternal age affects pre-adult survival in 252 of 272 populations (93%) representing 97 animal species. Age effects tended to be deleterious in invertebrates and mammals, including humans, confirming the presence of senescence. However, bird species were a conspicuous exception, as pre-adult survival tended to increase with maternal age in surveyed populations. In all groups, maternal-age effects became more negative in older mothers. Invertebrates senesced faster than vertebrates, and humans aged faster than non-human mammals. Within invertebrates, lepidopterans demonstrated the most extreme rates of maternal-effect senescence. Among the surveyed studies, phylogeny, life history and environment (e.g. laboratory versus wild populations) were tightly associated; this made it difficult to make confident inferences regarding the causes of diversity for the phenomenon. However, we provide some testable suggestions, and we observe that some differences appear to be consistent with predictions from evolutionary theory. We discuss how future work may help clarify ultimate and proximate causes for this diversity.
Data Citation
Ivimey-Cook, Edward; Moorad, Jacob (2020), The diversity of maternal-age effects upon pre-adult survival across animal species, v2, Dryad, Dataset, https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5mkkwh73d
| Date made available | 12 Aug 2020 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Dryad |
| Date of data production | 12 Aug 2020 |
Research output
- 1 Article
-
The diversity of maternal-age effects upon pre-adult survival across animal species
Ivimey-Cook, E. & Moorad, J., 12 Aug 2020, In: Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 287, 1932, 9 p., 20200972.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile
Projects
- 1 Finished
-
EASTBIO: EASTBIO East of Scotland BioScience Doctoral Training Partnership studentship - Research Training Grant BB/J01446X/1
Smith, S. (Student)
1/09/12 → 30/09/18
Project: Other (Non-Funded/Miscellaneous)
Cite this
- DataSetCite