Cape Argus

Easy survival of the sluggish

Laziness has its place as strategy to live on, scientists find

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IF YOU’RE always being criticised for being lazy, it seems you could have a good excuse. A study suggests idleness is an excellent survival strategy – and the sloths among us may represent the next stage in human evolution.

Scientists believe they have uncovered a previously overlooked law of natural selection based on “survival of the slacker”.

This suggests that laziness can be a good strategy for ensuring the survival of individual­s, species and even whole groups of species.

Although the research was based on lowly molluscs living on the floor of the Atlantic, the authors believe they may have stumbled on a general principle that could apply to higher animals – including land-dwelling vertebrate­s.

The scientists carried out an extensive study of the energy needs of 299 species of extinct and living bivalves and gastropods – including slugs and oysters – spanning a period of 5 million years.

Those that had managed to escape extinction and survived to the present day tended to be “low maintenanc­e” species with minimal energy requiremen­ts.

Molluscs that had gone the way of the dinosaurs and disappeare­d had higher metabolic rates than their still flourishin­g cousins.

US ecologist Professor Bruce Lieberman, who co-led the University of Kansas team, said: “Maybe in the long term the best evolutiona­ry strategy for animals is to be lassitudin­ous and sluggish. The lower the metabolic rate, the more likely the species you belong to will survive. Instead of ‘survival of the fittest’, maybe a better metaphor for the history of life is ‘survival of the laziest’ or at least ‘survival of the sluggish’.”

The findings, reported in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B, could have important implicatio­ns for forecastin­g the fate of species affected by climate change, said the scientists.

Dr Luke Strotz, also from the University of Kansas, said: “In a sense, we’re looking at a potential predictor of extinction probabilit­y.

“At the species level, metabolic rate isn’t the be-all and end-all of extinction – there are a lot of factors at play.

“But these results say that the metabolic rate of an organism is a component of extinction likelihood.

“With a higher metabolic rate, a species is more likely to go extinct.” – Daily Mail

 ?? PICTURE: SUPPLIED ?? JUST CHILL: New research suggests that species with high metabolic rates are more likely to go extinct.
PICTURE: SUPPLIED JUST CHILL: New research suggests that species with high metabolic rates are more likely to go extinct.

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