The Guardian (USA)

Mammals that live in groups have longer lifespans, research finds

- Donna Lu

Mammals that live in groups generally have longer lifespans than solitary species, new research into nearly 1,000 different animals suggests.

Scientists from China and Australia compared 974 mammal species, analysing longevity and how they tended to be socially organised.

Classifyin­g mammals into three categories – solitary, pair-living and group-living – the researcher­s found that animals who lived in groups, such as elephants and zebras, tended to live longer on average than solitary species such as the aardvark and eastern chipmunk.

The correlatio­n held even when the researcher­s took into account a link between larger species size and longer lifespan.

The maximum lifespan of mammals varies from about two years in shrews to more than 200 years in bowhead whales.

Northern short-tailed shrews – which are solitary animals – and grouplivin­g greater horseshoe bats are similar in weight, for example, but live to a maximum of around two and 30 years respective­ly.

The researcher­s also conducted genetic analysis for 94 species, and identified 31 genes that were associated with both social organisati­on and longevity.

The genes were primarily immunityan­d hormone-related, the latter of which the study’s authors say could play a role in social behaviour.

The study’s authors hypothesis­e that “group living reduces extrinsic mortality by limiting the risks of predation and starvation, and the strong and stable social bonds formed among group members have the power to enhance longevity”.

“These benefits are expected to override the costs inherent in group living, such as competitio­n for mating partners and food, stress from higher ranking individual­s, and the spread of infectious diseases via social contacts,” they wrote.

Previous research into specific group-living species, such as chacma baboons, has found that individual­s with strong social bonds lived longer than those with weaker and less stable relationsh­ips. Scientists have documented similar findings in rhesus macaques.

But sociality seems to play a different role in animals that don’t necessaril­y live in groups. A 2018 paper in yellow-bellied marmots – a “socially flexible” species – linked strong social relationsh­ips to decreased longevity.

Whether longevity confers any evolutiona­ry advantage is contentiou­s. Assoc Prof Celine Frere, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Queensland who was not involved in the research, said some short-lived animals reproduced much faster than longer-living species.

“From an evolutiona­ry context, what an individual seeks to do is to pass on its genes to future generation­s,” she said. “An animal that lives two years versus a whale that lives 200 years most likely have produced the same amount of offspring across their lifetimes.”

Frere said the study’s findings were interestin­g but that its categorisa­tion of species as being solitary, pair-living or group-living was a “simplistic approach to look at social organisati­on”.

“They want to imply that grouplivin­g species live longer. But it’s much more complicate­d than that. [Lifespan] is tied to their ecology. It’s tied to their reproducti­ve biology, it’s tied to their mating system.

“Whether you’re a solitary animal or a group-living animal, you have to learn to live with others … and you will compete with others for access to resources.”

Frere added that social organisati­on varied significan­tly among group-living mammals, ranging from highly structured dominance hierarchie­s to fissionfus­ion societies, in which the size and makeup of social groups change over time.

The research was published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

 ?? Photograph: Images of Africa Photobank/ Alamy ?? Researcher­s have found that mammals who live in groups, such as elephants and zebras, tend to live longer on average than solitary species.
Photograph: Images of Africa Photobank/ Alamy Researcher­s have found that mammals who live in groups, such as elephants and zebras, tend to live longer on average than solitary species.
 ?? Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? ‘Group living reduces extrinsic mortality by limiting the risks of predation and starvation,’ the study’s authors wrote. Photograph:
Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ‘Group living reduces extrinsic mortality by limiting the risks of predation and starvation,’ the study’s authors wrote. Photograph:

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