No abstract
Human senescence patterns—late onset of mortality increase, slow mortality acceleration, and exceptional longevity—are often described as unique in the animal world. Using an individual-based data set from longitudinal studies of wild populations of seven primate species, we show that contrary to assumptions of human uniqueness, human senescence falls within the primate continuum of aging; the tendency for males to have shorter life spans and higher age-specific mortality than females throughout much of adulthood is a common feature in many, but not all, primates; and the aging profiles of primate species do not reflect phylogenetic position. These findings suggest that mortality patterns in primates are shaped by local selective forces rather than phylogenetic history.
The human lifespan has traversed a long evolutionary and historical path, from short-lived primate ancestors to contemporary Japan, Sweden, and other longevity frontrunners. Analyzing this trajectory is crucial for understanding biological and sociocultural processes that determine the span of life. Here we reveal a fundamental regularity. Two straight lines describe the joint rise of life expectancy and lifespan equality: one for primates and the second one over the full range of human experience from average lifespans as low as 2 y during mortality crises to more than 87 y for Japanese women today. Across the primate order and across human populations, the lives of females tend to be longer and less variable than the lives of males, suggesting deep evolutionary roots to the male disadvantage. Our findings cast fresh light on primate evolution and human history, opening directions for research on inequality, sociality, and aging.biodemography | equality | lifespan | pace and shape | senescence L ongevous populations have two characteristics: The average length of life is long and relative variation in lifespans is low. For example, life tables for contemporary Sweden and Japan indicate that most deaths occur at ages between the late 70s and early 90s. Our primate relatives, in contrast, have lifespans that are highly variable in length but short on average and rarely longer than 30 y (Fig. 1). An association between the average length of life and its variability has been found for industrialized societies (1, 2). However, detailed knowledge is lacking about whether and how this association varies across species separated by millions of years of primate evolution or whether it has changed over the past several centuries of unprecedented social progress in human populations. Fuller comprehension of the relationship between rising lifespans and reduced lifespan variability across evolution and history holds potential insights that might illuminate past, current, and future longevity.We pose three related questions aimed at filling this knowledge gap: How long and variable are lifespans for humans compared with nonhuman primates, for humans today compared with the past, and for males compared with females? We provide answers to these questions by applying a powerful framework that simultaneously examines changes in both the average length of life in a population or species-the "pace" of life-and relative variation in the length of life, i.e., the "shape" of the distribution of ages at death (3-5). Studying variation in lifespan links to increasing interest in social, economic, and health inequalities and to key sociological findings that relate social factors-including high social status and social integration-to longer, healthier lifespans in human and animal societies (6-10).Estimating the average length of life (here measured by life expectancy, the mean age at death) and variation in lifespans relative to the average (measured here as "lifespan equality"; Box 1) requires data on the ages at death of individuals...
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