“…Data on maximal longevity (years), time to reach sexual maturity from birth (days) in males and females, body mass (g) and metabolic rate (W) for mammalian and bird species were obtained from the carefully curated AnAge database compiled by de Magalhães and Costa (). Species belonging to the following 17 orders or superorders (“clades”) were analyzed, chosen as the scaling relationship between brain mass and number of cerebral cortical neurons that apply to at least five species in the respective clades are known (Dos Santos et al, ; Herculano‐Houzel et al, ; Jardim‐Messeder et al, ; Olkowicz et al, ): Afrosoricida ( n = 7 in the AnAge database), Artiodactyla ( n = 172), Carnivora ( n = 205), Cetacea ( n = 45), Dasyuromorphia ( n = 38), Didelphimorphia ( n = 20), Diprodontia ( n = 72), Erinaceomorpha ( n = 10), Hyracoidea ( n = 3), Lagomorpha ( n = 20), Macroscelidea ( n = 9), Passeriformes ( n = 417), Primata ( n = 174), Proboscidea ( n = 2), Psittaciformes ( n = 169), Rodentia ( n = 357) and Soricomorpha ( n = 33), in a total of 1,753 species (1,167 mammals and 586 birds). We thus did not examine the order Chiroptera, which is known to include extraordinarily long‐lived species for their small body size, simply because data on numbers of neurons in the brain of these animals are not yet available.…”