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绝经期和生殖衰老在一种长寿的社会性哺乳动物中的作用。

The role of menopause and reproductive senescence in a long-lived social mammal.

机构信息

Northwest Fisheries Science Center, 2725 Montlake Blvd E, Seattle, WA 98112, USA.

出版信息

Front Zool. 2009 Feb 3;6:4. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-6-4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Menopause is a seemingly maladaptive life-history trait that is found in many long-lived mammals. There are two competing evolutionary hypotheses for this phenomenon; in the adaptive view of menopause, the cessation of reproduction may increase the fitness of older females; in the non-adaptive view, menopause may be explained by physiological deterioration with age. The decline and eventual cessation of reproduction has been documented in a number of mammalian species, however the evolutionary cause of this trait is unknown.

RESULTS

We examined a unique 30-year time series of killer whales, tracking the reproductive performance of individuals through time. Killer whales are extremely long-lived, and may have the longest documented post-reproductive lifespan of any mammal, including humans. We found no strong support for either of the adaptive hypotheses of menopause; there was little support for the presence of post-reproductive females benefitting their daughter's reproductive performance (interbirth interval and reproductive lifespan of daughters), or the number of mature recruits to the population. Oldest mothers (> 35) did appear to have a small positive impact on calf survival, suggesting that females may gain experience with age. There was mixed support for the grandmother hypothesis - grandoffspring survival probabilities were not influenced by living grandmothers, but grandmothers may positively influence survival of juveniles at a critical life stage.

CONCLUSION

Although existing data do not allow us to examine evolutionary tradeoffs between survival and reproduction for this species, we were able to examine the effect of maternal age on offspring survival. Our results are consistent with similar studies of other mammals - oldest mothers appear to be better mothers, producing calves with higher survival rates. Studies of juvenile survival in humans have reported positive benefits of grandmothers on newly weaned infants; our results indicate that 3-year old killer whales may experience a positive benefit from helpful grandmothers. While our research provides little support for menopause evolving to provide fitness benefits to mothers or grandmothers, our work supports previous research showing that menopause and long post-reproductive lifespans are not a human phenomenon.

摘要

背景

绝经是一种在许多长寿哺乳动物中发现的看似适应不良的生命史特征。对于这种现象有两种相互竞争的进化假说;在绝经的适应性观点中,生殖的停止可能会增加老年雌性的适应性;在非适应性观点中,绝经可能是由于随着年龄的增长而导致的生理恶化。在许多哺乳动物物种中已经记录到生殖能力的下降和最终停止,但这种特征的进化原因尚不清楚。

结果

我们研究了一组独特的 30 年虎鲸时间序列,通过时间跟踪个体的生殖表现。虎鲸的寿命极长,可能拥有有记录以来最长的生殖后寿命,包括人类。我们几乎没有发现绝经的适应性假说的有力支持;几乎没有证据表明有生殖后雌性会受益于其女儿的生殖表现(女儿的出生间隔和生殖寿命),或者有多少成熟的新个体加入种群。最年长的母亲(>35 岁)似乎对幼崽的生存有轻微的积极影响,这表明雌性可能随着年龄的增长而获得经验。祖母假说存在混合支持 - 孙辈的生存概率不受健在祖母的影响,但祖母可能会在关键的生命阶段积极影响幼崽的生存。

结论

尽管现有数据不允许我们检验这种物种生存与生殖之间的进化权衡,但我们能够检验母亲年龄对后代生存的影响。我们的结果与其他哺乳动物的类似研究一致 - 最年长的母亲似乎是更好的母亲,生育的幼崽存活率更高。对人类幼仔生存的研究报告了祖母对新断奶婴儿的积极益处;我们的研究结果表明,3 岁的虎鲸可能会从有帮助的祖母那里获得积极的益处。虽然我们的研究几乎没有为绝经进化为母亲或祖母提供适应性益处提供支持,但我们的工作支持了之前的研究,即绝经和长的生殖后寿命不是人类独有的现象。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f862/2644688/a0d692f6b111/1742-9994-6-4-1.jpg

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