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Intergenerational transfers may have decoupled physiological and chronological age in a eusocial insect

Journal

AGEING RESEARCH REVIEWS
Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 398-408

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.arr.2005.03.007

Keywords

intergenerational transfer; physiological and chronological age; eusocial insect

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [P01 AG 22500, P01 AG022500-03, P01 AG022500, P01 AG022500-02] Funding Source: Medline

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Life-history theory generally predicts that there should be no selection for longevity beyond the limit of reproductive capacity. However, the capacity to increase fitness may not end when individuals reach a state of functional sterility. Recent studies show that intergenerational transfers of resources from post-reproductive parents can increase the offspring's fitness, and analytical theory shows that age-trajectories of transfers may shape the course of senescence in social organisms. In eusocial insects, female roles are partitioned so that one phenotype or caste reproduces while another is responsible for resource transfers: the reproductive queens are arrested in a continuous reproductive mode, while transfer-activities such as hygienic behaviors, guarding, foraging and further food processing (nursing) that increases the nutritional value of provisions are conducted by sterile ''workers. Worker honey bees normally perform these tasks in a sequence so that nursing inside the protected nest is conducted prior to more risky exterior hive activities such as guarding and foraging. However, foragers may revert to nurse-activity in response to demographic changes, and worker bees can also develop into a stress resistant survival form with a 10-fold increase in lifespan. This elastic division of parental functions is believed to increase colony fitness. Further, it generates a stage-dependent trajectory of senescence that is difficult to address with established theories of aging. In the following, we show how a recent theory that includes resource transfers can be used to elucidate patterns of senescence in eusocial, non-reproducing individuals like the honey bee worker. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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