Department of Primate Behavior and Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany; Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham NC, USA; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, Canada; Duke Population Research Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham NC, USA; Department of Biological Sciences, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY, USA.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2023 Sep;152:105282. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2023.105282. Epub 2023 Jun 13.
Field studies of natural mammal populations present powerful opportunities to investigate the determinants of health and aging using fine-grained observations of known individuals across the life course. Here, we synthesize five decades of findings from one such study: the wild baboons of the Amboseli ecosystem in Kenya. First, we discuss the profound associations between early life adversity, adult social conditions, and key aging outcomes in this population, especially survival. Second, we review potential mediators of the relationship between early life adversity and survival in our population. Notably, our tests of two leading candidate mediators-social isolation and glucocorticoid levels-fail to identify a single, strong mediator of early life effects on adult survival. Instead, early adversity, social isolation, and glucocorticoids are independently linked to adult lifespans, suggesting considerable scope for mitigating the negative consequences of early life adversity. Third, we review our work on the evolutionary rationale for early life effects on mortality, which currently argues against clear predictive adaptive responses. Finally, we end by highlighting major themes emerging from the study of sociality, development, and aging in the Amboseli baboons, as well as important open questions for future work.
对自然哺乳动物种群的实地研究为使用整个生命过程中对已知个体的精细观察来研究健康和衰老的决定因素提供了强有力的机会。在这里,我们综合了肯尼亚安博塞利生态系统中一项此类研究的五十年研究结果:野生狒狒。首先,我们讨论了该人群中早期逆境、成年社会条件和关键衰老结果之间的深远关联,特别是生存。其次,我们回顾了我们人群中早期逆境与生存之间关系的潜在中介。值得注意的是,我们对两个主要候选中介的测试-社会隔离和糖皮质激素水平-未能确定单一的、强大的早期生活对成年生存的中介。相反,早期逆境、社会隔离和糖皮质激素与成年寿命独立相关,这表明有很大的空间可以减轻早期逆境的负面影响。第三,我们回顾了我们关于早期生活对死亡率的进化合理性的工作,这目前反对明确的预测适应性反应。最后,我们通过突出安博塞利狒狒的社会性、发育和衰老研究中出现的主要主题以及未来工作的重要开放性问题来结束。