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Comparing individual and population measures of senescence across 10 years in a wild insect population
Authors:Rolando Rodríguez‐Muoz  Jelle J Boonekamp  Xing P Liu  Ian Skicko  Sophie Haugland Pedersen  David N Fisher  Paul Hopwood  Tom Tregenza
Institution:Rolando Rodríguez‐Muñoz,Jelle J. Boonekamp,Xing P. Liu,Ian Skicko,Sophie Haugland Pedersen,David N. Fisher,Paul Hopwood,Tom Tregenza
Abstract:Declines in survival and performance with advancing age (senescence) have been widely documented in natural populations, but whether patterns of senescence across traits reflect a common underlying process of biological ageing remains unclear. Senescence is typically characterized via assessments of the rate of change in mortality with age (actuarial senescence) or the rate of change in phenotypic performance with age (phenotypic senescence). Although both phenomena are considered indicative of underlying declines in somatic integrity, whether actuarial and phenotypic senescence rates are actually correlated has yet to be established. Here we present evidence of both actuarial and phenotypic senescence from a decade‐long longitudinal field study of wild insects. By tagging every individual and using continuous video monitoring with a network of up to 140 video cameras, we were able to record survival and behavioral data on an entire adult population of field crickets. This reveals that both actuarial and phenotypic senescence vary substantially across 10 annual generations. This variation allows us to identify a strong correlation between actuarial and phenotypic measures of senescence. Our study demonstrates age‐related phenotypic declines reflected in population level mortality rates and reveals that observations of senescence in a single year may not be representative of a general pattern.
Keywords:BaSTA  demographic ageing  extrinsic mortality  intrinsic mortality  longevity  longitudinal study
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