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Despite the uniform appearance of pink flamingo shaking, people live in a very different lifestyle. In the Kamarg region of France, some live their entire life and others go to the Mediterranean coast. Now, scientists believe that these two groups are different from how their age is.
New research published in the journal Monday, August 25 PNAS In Italy, Spain or North Africa, migratory flamingogos leaving Camerag every year has been found in the winter, and non-migratory residents are older than Flamingoguli.
Search points to a link between migration behavior and aging rates, the most central in biology – and one of the misleading offs adds a new layer of complexity in one of them: Why are living animals feature an expiry date? And why do these expiration dates change so widely in different species? New research has added another level of complexity to these questions.
Hugo Kayuella, a co-author at Oxford University, a co-author Hugo Kayuella, said, “The causes of aging rate change are a problem that has been obsessed with researchers and polymath philosophers since ancient times.” ReleaseThe “For a long time, we thought that these variations were basically in the species. However, recently, our perception of the problem has changed,” he added.
Mounting evidence proves that people in the same species often say that the same rate is not the same age due to genetic, behavioral or environmental changes. Studying these differences can help scientists unlock the privacy of old age. Thanks to their long lifetime and behavioral variations, the greatest Flemingo of Camerags provides an ideal model for this study.
Ceuila and her colleagues have analyzed more than 40 years of data collected by the Flemingo Tagging and Tracking Program at the Tour Dua Valat Research Institute. These data describes the death rate and reproductive patterns of 1,840 migration and non-migraating greater flaring. Residents demonstrated low -mortality rates in adults early than the people transferred to individuals, resulting in life expectations that were more than 6.7 years on average.
Migratory Greater Fleming, however, is 40% slower than residents and reduces death rate after death. In fact, searching shows that old age begins in the greater Flemingo compared to immigrants.
Researchers also invented the differences between migrant and non -immigratory greater flamenging. Residents were more likely to reproduce than immigrants before age, they showed much more intense decrease in breeding with ages than immigrants.
Co-authors co-authors Tour Do Valat’s research scientist Joslin Champagnon told Gizmodo an email. “Immigrants, on the other hand, can trade some initial breeding to survive better in later life. “
These differences are “probably in old age and health when associated with a compromise between young and health,” co-authors Sabastian Rox, Postdortoral Researcher of the French National Center for Scientific Research, said in the notice. “Residents live sharply at first but pay for this speed later. On the other hand, immigrants seem to be more slowly age.”
Together, these searches suggest that in the early life of the transfer, the rate of elderly and reproductive sensitivity reduces the ability to reproduce a person-related person-according to researchers, the research that highlights the critical role in the life of the old life, which plays a critical role in survival and reproduction.
“Our study shows that the size and motion of the aging can be converted by the early decisions of life such as transfer or initial breeding,” Shyamonan Dr. Although these results cannot be directly applied to people, SHe hopes that future studies will solve questions about how human migrations affect the rate of aging.