linkedin post 2018-09-13 03:56:14

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GENETIC SENESCENCE. "There is substantial evidence for genetic control of senescence in some iteroparous animals, indicating that senescence is at least sometimes “programmed” (in the inclusive sense) and highlighting the question of the relationship between aging “programs” and selection. For example, in Drosophila melanogaster, selective breeding and other studies demonstrated a genetic, heritable component to senescence." View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2018-09-11 03:28:27

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SUICIDE AS ADAPTIVE? "The idea that self-inflicted organismal death could be adaptive sounds, at face value, absurd. An adaptation is a trait that is suitable (apt) for the current circumstances or environmental challenges, and archetypal examples include traits that promote survival." View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2018-09-13 03:53:25

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SPARING THE PROLIFIC. "Iteroparous organisms have multiple reproductive episodes during the life cycle, as opposed to a solitary event. In these species, senescence leading to death is less abrupt and dramatic, but is ubiquitous nonetheless. General explanations for organismal senescence are varied and contentious, and the idea that iteroparous senescence is “programmed” is not the majority view." View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2018-09-13 03:50:53

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INTERNAL DEATH CLOCK. "Similarly in small marsupials, castration or prevention of mating can increase male life span up to that of females. These experiments indicate that rapid senescence and death following reproduction in at least some semelparous animals are genetically “programmed” and internally controlled." View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2018-09-11 03:25:31

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WIDESPREAD CELL DEATH SYSTEMS. "Are Internal, Death-Promoting Mechanisms Ever Adaptive? Natural selection acts primarily on organisms, and the existence of evolved, active, internal mechanisms that cause organismal death would seem paradoxical. However, there is substantial evidence that internal death promoting mechanisms exist and are taxonomically widespread." View in LinkedIn
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