Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Mechanisms of age-related change in performance in a wild social bird: parental age effects, cellular senescence, and dominance acquisition

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dc.contributor Young, Andrew
dc.contributor Wilson, Alastair
dc.creator Brown, A
dc.date 2022-06-30T17:11:01Z
dc.date 2022-06-27
dc.date 2022-06-30T11:34:23Z
dc.date 2022-06-30T17:11:01Z
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-23T12:15:07Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-23T12:15:07Z
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10871/130109
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/258565
dc.description Age-related changes in performance (reproduction and survival) are widespread in nature. In vertebrates, age-related performance trajectories are typically characterised by early-life improvements followed by late-life declines (termed ‘senescence’). However, the mechanisms that underpin such age-related changes in performance are still poorly understood. In this thesis, I combine molecular, cellular, long-term life history, and radio-telemetry data from a population of a cooperatively breeding bird, the white-browed sparrow weaver Plocepasser mahali, to investigate some key shortfalls in our understanding of the mechanistic origins of age-related changes in organismal performance. In Chapter 2, I present the first longitudinal evidence that within-parent changes in age positively predict offspring telomere lengths, an effect that has the potential to positively impact parent and offspring fitness. Then, in Chapter 3, I present the first evidence for within-individual accumulation of senescent cells with advancing age in a natural population. I also demonstrate that these within-individual increases in senescent cell frequency over the short term are not reflected at the population level, suggestive of the selective disappearance of either individuals with high incidences of senescent cells from the population, or of senescent cells within individuals. In Chapter 4, I investigate the effects of age on dominance acquisition, and provide evidence that individuals that are older relative to other potential competitors are more likely to win dominance turnovers. This finding highlights a potentially widespread mechanism by which the costs of cooperation (in terms of increased competition for breeding positions) could be mitigated in cooperatively breeding species. Finally, in Chapter 5, I investigate whether within-group social circumstances influence subordinate dispersal behaviour. Despite finding that individuals do not seem to adjust their dispersal behaviour in response to the expected payoffs of remaining in their current group versus dispersing, I show that individuals tend to disperse to subordinate positions in smaller groups and with fewer same age or older individuals. As living in a larger group entails survival costs, and individuals are more likely to win dominance in groups where they are the oldest subordinate of their sex, these results suggests individuals may ‘trade up’ their social circumstances when they disperse. Together, my findings elucidate some key shortfalls in our understanding of the mechanisms underlying age-related changes in performance.
dc.description BBSRC
dc.language en
dc.publisher University of Exeter
dc.publisher College of Life and Environmental Sciences
dc.rights 2023-12-30
dc.rights This thesis is embargoed until 30/Dec/2023 because the author wishes to publish papers using material that is substantially drawn from the thesis.
dc.rights http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
dc.subject ageing
dc.subject telomeres
dc.subject cooperative breeding
dc.subject senescence
dc.subject dispersal
dc.subject dominance
dc.subject prospecting
dc.subject white-browed sparrow weaver
dc.title Mechanisms of age-related change in performance in a wild social bird: parental age effects, cellular senescence, and dominance acquisition
dc.type Thesis or dissertation
dc.type PhD in Biological Sciences
dc.type Doctoral
dc.type Doctoral Thesis


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