Hämäläinen Anni, Dammhahn Melanie, Aujard Fabienne, Kraus Cornelia
Sociobiology/Anthropology Department, Georg-August University Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany; Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Unit, German Primate Center DPZ, Göttingen, Germany.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Unit, German Primate Center DPZ, Göttingen, Germany; Animal Ecology, University of Potsdam, Maulbeerallee 1, 14469 Potsdam, Germany.
Exp Gerontol. 2015 Jan;61:54-61. doi: 10.1016/j.exger.2014.11.017. Epub 2014 Nov 22.
Muscle strength reflects physical functioning, declines at old age and predicts health and survival in humans and laboratory animals. Age-associated muscle deterioration causes loss of strength and may impair fitness of wild animals. However, the effects of age and life-history characteristics on muscle strength in wild animals are unknown. We investigated environment- and sex-specific patterns of physical functioning by measuring grip strength in wild and captive gray mouse lemurs. We expected more pronounced strength senescence in captivity due to condition-dependent, extrinsic mortality found in nature. Males were predicted to be stronger but potentially experience more severe senescence than females as predicted by life history theory. We found similar senescent declines in captive males and females as well as wild females, whereas wild males showed little decline, presumably due to their early mortality. Captive animals were generally weaker and showed earlier declines than wild animals. Unexpectedly, females tended to be stronger than males, especially in the reproductive season. Universal intrinsic mechanisms (e.g. sarcopenia) likely cause the similar patterns of strength loss across settings. The female advantage in muscle strength merits further study; it may follow higher reproductive investment by males, or be an adaptation associated with female social dominance.
肌肉力量反映身体机能,在老年时会下降,并可预测人类和实验动物的健康及生存状况。与年龄相关的肌肉退化会导致力量丧失,并可能损害野生动物的健康状况。然而,年龄和生活史特征对野生动物肌肉力量的影响尚不清楚。我们通过测量野生和圈养灰鼠狐猴的握力,研究了环境和性别特异性的身体机能模式。由于自然界中存在依赖于条件的外在死亡率,我们预计圈养中的力量衰老会更加明显。根据生活史理论预测,雄性预计更强壮,但可能比雌性经历更严重的衰老。我们发现圈养的雄性和雌性以及野生雌性都有类似的衰老下降,而野生雄性下降很少,大概是由于它们的早期死亡率。圈养动物通常比野生动物更弱,且下降得更早。出乎意料的是,雌性往往比雄性更强壮,尤其是在繁殖季节。普遍的内在机制(如肌肉减少症)可能导致不同环境下类似的力量丧失模式。雌性在肌肉力量方面的优势值得进一步研究;这可能是由于雄性更高的生殖投入,或者是与雌性社会优势相关的一种适应。