Sharon Begley
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Aug 15, 2008 01:20 PM
Why do
animals, notably women, outlive their reproductive years? Nature would
seem to have little or no use for us once we reach middle age, let
alone our dotage; after all, the only thing evolution cares about—by
which I mean, acts on—is how many offspring we leave. Why, then, should
we live beyond the time when we can reproduce?
That mystery has given rise to the grandmother hypothesis:
the idea that primates, elephants and a few other long-lived species
survive long enough for their offspring to have offspring because older
generations retain a store of knowledge that helps their descendants
survive and multiply.
In the case of the elephants, scientists describe in a new study in the journal Biology Letters how they followed three family groups during the 1993 drought in Tanzania’s Tarangire National Park,
the most severe one in that region in the past 35 years. Sixteen of 81
elephant calves in the three groups died; normally, only two or three
would have. But the mortality was not spread evenly among the three
groups. The two groups that left the park suffered lower mortality
rates than the one that stayed; the wanderers apparently found enough
food and water outside the park to provide for themselves and their
young.
Which raises
the question: why did the two groups leave the park? They both had
elderly matriarchs—45 and 38 years old, respectively. The group that
stayed put had a 33-year-old matriarch. These older females may have
been able to draw upon memories of an earlier drought and how they
survived it: the 45-year-old, for instance, born in 1948, would have
been 10 when the great drought of 1958-61 began. The 38-year-old (born
in 1955) would have been only three then, but was 6 when it ended, old
enough to remember. The 35-year old, born the first year of the
previous drought and only 3 when it ended, would have been too young to
remember it.
That suggests
that experienced matriarchs give their families an edge in periods of
drought through their memories of distant, life-sustaining sources of
food and water, says Charles Foley of the Wildlife Conservation Society,
who led the study: “Older females with knowledge of distant resources
become crucial to the survival of herds during periods of extreme
climatic events. It’s enticing to think that these old females and
their memories of previous periods of trauma and survival would have
meant all the difference.”
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