The aging baboon: comparative demography in a non-human primate - PubMed (original) (raw)
Comparative Study
. 2002 Jul 9;99(14):9591-5.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.142675599. Epub 2002 Jun 24.
Affiliations
- PMID: 12082185
- PMCID: PMC123185
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.142675599
Comparative Study
The aging baboon: comparative demography in a non-human primate
Anne M Bronikowski et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002.
Abstract
Why do closely related primate genera vary in longevity, and what does this teach us about human aging? Life tables of female baboons (Papio hamadryas) in two wild populations of East Africa and in a large captive population in San Antonio, Texas, provide striking similarities and contrasts to human mortality patterns. For captive baboons at the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, we estimate the doubling time of adult mortality rate as 4.8 years. Wild females in free-living populations in Tanzania and in Kenya showed doubling times of 3.5 and 3.8 years, respectively. Although these values are considerably faster than the estimates of 7-8 years for humans, these primates share a demographic feature of human aging: within each taxon populations primarily vary in the level of Gompertz mortality intercept (frailty) and vary little in the demographic rate of aging. Environmental and genetic factors within taxa appear to affect the level of frailty underlying senescence. In contrast, primate taxa are differentiated by rates of demographic aging, even if they cannot be characterized by species-specific lifespan.
Figures
Figure 1
(A) Mortality rates (hazards) for wild populations of Amboseli (⧫) and Gombe (□), and for the captive population of SFBR (●). (B) Natural logarithm of mortality rates. Points are smoothed log mortality based on the running average of mortality across a 3-year window. In both figures, adult mortality trajectories (lines) based on Gompertz parameters estimated from age 5 years.
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