Journal
FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2021.737860
Keywords
age; body size; cetaceans; lifespan; sirenians
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Funding
- Excellence Center in Veterinary Bioscience, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, Thailand
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This study used skin tissue samples from 23 marine mammal species to investigate the relationship between adult body weight, length, relative telomere length, and lifespan. The results showed correlations between lifespan and adult body weight and length, but no correlation with relative telomere length. Larger marine mammals were found to live longer, but relative telomere length was not a good predictor of species longevity.
Marine mammals vary greatly in size and lifespan across species. This study determined whether measures of adult body weight, length and relative telomere length were related to lifespan. Skin tissue samples (n = 338) were obtained from 23 marine mammal species, including four Mysticeti, 19 Odontoceti and one dugong species, and the DNA extracted to measure relative telomere length using real-time PCR. Life span, adult body weight, and adult body length of each species were retrieved from existing databases. The phylogenetic signal analysis revealed that body length might be a significant factor for shaping evolutionary processes of cetacean species through time, especially for genus Balaenoptera that have an enormous size. Further, our study found correlations between lifespan and adult body weight (R-2 = 0.6465, p < 0.001) and adult body length (R-2 = 0.6142, p <= 0.001), but no correlations with relative telomere length (R-2 = -0.0476, p = 0.9826). While data support our hypothesis that larger marine mammals live longer, relative telomere length is not a good predictor of species longevity.
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