Department of Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Evolutionary and Population Biology Department, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Nov;93(11):1722-1735. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14184. Epub 2024 Oct 1.
Potential immortality is observed in several species (e.g. prickly pear cactus, hydra and flatworms) and is indicative of their negligible or even negative senescence rates. Unlike in senescent species, which experience reduced individual performance with age due to physiological degradation, species with negligible or negative senescence display mortality rates that remain constant or decline with age, respectively. These rates vary across taxa and are correlated with life history traits. Yet, the extent to which variable resource availability, a key driver of variation in life history traits, impacts species that show negligible or negative senescence is currently unknown. Here, we examine whether and how variation in the quantity, quality and feeding interval of resources impact population structure, population performance and life history trait trade-offs in two long-lived planaria that do not senesce: Schmidtea mediterranea and Dugesia tahitiensis. In a full factorial design, different combinations of resource quantity (reduced intake, standard intake and high intake) and quality (high and low quality) were provided in two different feeding intervals (7-day and 14-day intervals) for 19 weeks. We show that variability in resource availability, via decreases in quantity, quality and frequency of resources, does not diminish population viability in either species but does result in suboptimal conditions of stress in S. mediterranea. The high population viability we report can be attributed to two different mechanisms: increased reproduction or increased investment into maintenance at the expense of reproduction. Moreover, which mechanism was responsible for said high population viability was context-dependent and modulated by the specific life history strategy of the two planaria species. We show that suboptimal conditions can cause stress responses that have significant impacts on non-senescent species. The context-dependent response we observe suggests that species that do not senesce but are subject to suboptimal conditions of stress may ultimately exhibit declines in performance and ultimately die. A clearer understanding of the impact of suboptimal conditions of resource availability on non-senescent species is needed to determine the extent of stress experienced and ultimately whether a species can truly be immortal.
在几种物种(如仙人掌、水螅和平体动物)中观察到潜在的永生现象,这表明它们的衰老率极低甚至为负。与衰老物种不同,衰老物种由于生理退化,个体表现随年龄增长而下降,衰老率极低或为负的物种的死亡率分别保持不变或随年龄增长而下降。这些比率在不同的分类群中有所不同,并与生活史特征相关。然而,资源可用性的变化(生活史特征变化的关键驱动因素)对衰老率极低或为负的物种的影响程度目前尚不清楚。在这里,我们研究了资源数量、质量和喂养间隔的变化是否以及如何影响两种不会衰老的长寿扁形动物(地中海扁形虫和塔希提扁形虫)的种群结构、种群表现和生活史特征权衡:Schmidtea mediterranea 和 Dugesia tahitiensis。在完全因子设计中,在两种不同的喂养间隔(7 天和 14 天)中,以不同的资源数量(减少摄入、标准摄入和高摄入)和质量(高质量和低质量)组合提供不同的资源组合,持续了 19 周。我们表明,通过降低资源的数量、质量和频率,资源可用性的变化不会降低这两个物种的种群生存力,但会导致地中海扁形虫的压力条件不佳。我们报告的高种群生存力可以归因于两种不同的机制:增加繁殖或增加维持的投资,而不是繁殖。此外,哪种机制对高种群生存力负责取决于具体情况,并受到两种扁形虫物种特定生活史策略的调节。我们表明,不佳的条件会导致压力反应,对非衰老物种产生重大影响。我们观察到的依赖于上下文的反应表明,不会衰老但处于压力条件不佳的物种最终可能会表现出性能下降,最终死亡。需要更清楚地了解资源可用性不佳对非衰老物种的影响,以确定物种所经历的压力程度,最终确定物种是否真的可以永生。