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Loss of Earth’s old, wise, and large animals

Nature and the biosphere

Published Science 21 Nov 2024

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    10-06-2025 to 10-06-2026

    Available on-demand until 10th June 2026

  • Cost

    Subscription Required

  • Education type

    Article

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

Earth’s old animals are in decline. Despite this, emerging research is revealing the vital contributions of older individuals to cultural transmission, population dynamics, and ecosystem processes and services. Often the largest and most experienced, old individuals are most valued by humans and make important contributions to reproduction, information acquisition and cultural transmission, trophic dynamics, and resistance and resilience to natural and anthropogenic disturbance. These observations contrast with the senescence-focused paradigm of old age that has dominated the literature for over a century yet are consistent with findings from behavioral ecology and life-history theory. Here, we review why the global loss of old individuals can be particularly detrimental to long-lived animals with indeterminate growth, increasing reproductive output with age, and those dependent on migration, sociality and cultural transmission for survival. Longevity conservation is needed to protect the important ecological roles an ecosystem services provided by old animals.

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