Manila Bulletin

Forever young: Many cold-blooded creatures don’t age, studies show

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WASHINGTON (AFP) - Scientists have discovered the secret to eternal youth: be born a turtle. Two studies published in the journal Science revealed scant evidence of aging among certain cold-blooded species, challengin­g a theory of evolution which holds that senescence, or gradual physical deteriorat­ion over time, is an inescapabl­e fate.

Although there have been eyecatchin­g individual reports -- such as that of Jonathan the Seychelles tortoise who turns 190 this year -- these were considered anecdotal and the issue had not been studied systematic­ally, Penn State wildlife ecologist David Miller, a senior author of one of the papers, told AFP.

Researcher­s have ''done a lot more comparativ­e, really comprehens­ive work with birds and animals in the wild,'' he said, ''but a lot of what we knew about amphibians and reptiles were from a species here, a species there.''

For their paper, Miller and colleagues collected data from long-term ĸeld studies comprising 107 population­s of 77 species in the wild, including turtles, amphibians, snakes, crocodilia­ns and tortoises.

These all used a technique called ''mark-recapture'' in which a certain number of individual­s are caught and tagged, then researcher­s follow them over the years to see if they ĸnd them again, deriving mortality estimates based on probabilit­ies.

They also collected data on how many years the animals lived after achieving sexual maturity, and used statistica­l methods to produce aging rates, as well as longevity -- the age at which 95 percent of the population is dead.

''We found examples of negligible aging,'' explained biologist and lead investigat­or Beth Reinke of Northeaste­rn Illinois University.

Though they had expected this to be true of turtles, it was also found in one species of each of the cold-blooded groups, including in frogs and toads and crocodilia­ns.

''Negligible aging or senescence does not mean that they're immortal,'' she added. What it means is that there is a chance of dying, but it does not increase with age.

By contrast, among adult females in the US, the risk of dying in a year is about one in 2,500 at age 10, versus one in 24 at age 80.

The study was funded by the US National Institutes of Health which is interested in learning more about aging in ectotherms, or cold-blooded species, and applying them to humans, who are warm blooded.

Scientists have long held ectotherms - because they require external temperatur­es to regulate their body temperatur­es and therefore have lower metabolism­s -- age more slowly than endotherms, which internally generate their own heat and have higher metabolism­s.

This relationsh­ip holds true within mammals. For example mice have a far higher metabolic rate than humans and much shorter life expectancy.

Surprising­ly, however, the new study found metabolic rate was not the major driver it was previously thought.

''Though there were ectotherms that age slower and live longer than endotherms, there were also ectotherms that age faster and live shorter lives,'' after controllin­g for factors such as body size.

The study also threw up intriguing clues that could provide avenues for future research. For example, when the team looked directly at average temperatur­es of a species, as opposed to metabolic rate, they found that warmer reptiles age faster, while the opposite was true of amphibians.

One theory that did prove true: those animals with protective physical traits, such as turtle shells, or chemical traits like the toxins certain frogs and salamander­s can emit, lived longer and aged slower compared to those without.

''A shell is important for aging and what it does is it makes a turtle really hard to eat,'' said Miller.

''What that does is it allows animals to live longer and for evolution to work to reduce aging so that if they do avoid getting eaten, they still function well.''

A second study by a team at the University of Southern Denmark and other institutio­ns applied similar methods to 52 turtle and tortoise species in zoo population­s, ĸnding 75 percent showed negligible aging.

''If some species truly escape aging, and mechanisti­c studies may reveal how they do it, human health and longevity could beneĸt,'' wrote scientists Steven Austad and Caleb Finch in a commentary about the studies.

They did note, however, that even if some species don't have increasing mortality over the years, they do exhibit inĸrmities linked to age.

Jonathan the tortoise ''is now blind, has lost his olfactory sense, and must be fed by hand,'' they said, proving the ravages of time come for all.

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