Authors
James R Carey, Pablo Liedo, Dina Orozco, Marc Tatar, James W Vaupel
Publication date
1995/1/1
Journal
Journal of Animal Ecology
Pages
107-116
Publisher
British Ecological Society
Description
1. A long-standing question in biology is whether longevity is greater in females or in males for most non-human species. This is an open question for the majority of species because little is known about the nature of the underlying mortality differences. 2. Examination of mortality data on approximately 600 000 medflies of each sex revealed a demographic paradox--male medflies possessed the higher life expectancy (average longevity) but female medflies were usually the last to die. 3. The underlying demographic cause of this incongruency was a male-female mortality crossover--females exhibited higher mortality than males to around 3 weeks, lower mortality than males from about 3-8 weeks, and mortality approximately equal to that of males thereafter. 4. The findings help explain the ambiguity of male-female longevity differences in the literature, suggest that relative male-female survival cannot be used as a …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JR Carey, P Liedo, D Orozco, M Tatar, JW Vaupel - Journal of Animal Ecology, 1995