Evolutionary Theories of Ageing
The Shadow of Selection
Natural selection is strongest early in life, when survival and reproduction determine evolutionary success. As age increases, selection pressure weakens, allowing late-acting harmful effects to persist in populations. This declining selection with age is a central prediction of classical evolutionary theory. [1] [2] [3]
Mutation Accumulation
This theory proposes that harmful mutations with effects late in life accumulate because selection is too weak to remove them. Their gradual buildup contributes to age-related decline. [1] [2]
Antagonistic Pleiotropy
Some genes are beneficial early in life but harmful later. Evolution favors early-life advantages even when they carry late-life costs, such as increased disease risk or tissue exhaustion. [3] [4]
Disposable Soma
The disposable soma theory explains ageing as a trade-off in energy allocation. Organisms invest enough in maintenance to reach reproduction, but not enough to preserve the body indefinitely. [5] [6]
Summary
Evolutionary theories of ageing emphasize weakening selection, trade-offs, and late-acting damage. They explain why ageing persists even though it reduces fitness later in life. [4] [7]
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References
- Medawar, P. B. An Unsolved Problem of Biology (1952).
- Hamilton, W. D. "The moulding of senescence by natural selection." Journal of Theoretical Biology (1966).
- Williams, G. C. "Pleiotropy, natural selection, and the evolution of senescence." Evolution (1957).
- Rose, M. R. Evolutionary Biology of Aging (1991).
- Kirkwood, T. B. L. "Evolution of ageing." Nature (1977).
- Kirkwood, T. B. L., Holliday, R. "The evolution of ageing and longevity." Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B (1979).
- Kirkwood, T. B. L., Austad, S. N. "Why do we age?" Nature (2000).