Life Span & Size: Research & Average Ratios

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In summary: There is an obvious relation between size and age. This Seems to be somewhat true for all kinds of life. I was just wondering if there is an average weight to age ratio.For mammals however... tiny usually means short-lived (relative to a human). Another measure is reproductive cycles, how rapid, how long until the one of... etc.
  • #1
binbots
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There is an obvious connecting with the size of a living creature and how long it lives. I know that this is not always true but for the most part it is. I was wondering what this field of research this is called. Is there an average life span to mass ratio?
 
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  • #2
You would need to break it up by categories. Plants, animals/humans, invertebrates, etc. Each of these would have a different result, for different reasons which may include fecundity and metabolic rate.
 
  • #3
I think that there has been a discussion about this previously on these forums. I'll try to dig it up.

Edit: Wait, I thought this was just in general about how ageing worked. Here's a thread on that:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=364808&highlight=life+span
As for the 'size vs life span' I do not think it is true for organisms. Maybe within a specific type of species it may be correlated (ie. larger humans live shorter lives) but I do not think there is a correlation between size of animal and it's life span.
 
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  • #4
Blue whale: Life span 80 years, weight 175,000-28500 pounds
Koala: life span 17-20 years, weight 220-265 pounds
common hampster: lifespan 2 years, weight 4-32 oz.
grizzly bear: life span 30 years, weight 200-650 pounds

There is an obvious relation between size and age. This Seems to be somewhat true for all kinds of life. I was just wondering if there is an average weight to age ratio.
 
  • #5
binbots said:
Blue whale: Life span 80 years, weight 175,000-28500 pounds
Koala: life span 17-20 years, weight 220-265 pounds
common hampster: lifespan 2 years, weight 4-32 oz.
grizzly bear: life span 30 years, weight 200-650 pounds

There is an obvious relation between size and age. This Seems to be somewhat true for all kinds of life. I was just wondering if there is an average weight to age ratio.

..for mammals. (maybe)

It took me a second to realize those were all mammals because the long lived and smaller exceptions I thought about were all reptiles.


There are some bugs which live a very long time too like termite queens.
Different insects have very varied lifespans from days to multiple decades and they all weigh very little.






EDIT: Hypatia, you said the same thing sorry I glazed over that.
 
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  • #6
Plenty of studies relate total number of heartbeats to life span.

For example...
"if an animal is built on a 10 percent larger scale it will have a 6 percent longer lifespan."
http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/longevity.htm

"This paper documents this analysis, which supports the concept of a close similarity in lifespan heartbeats among mammalian species and among avian species."
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/518447
 
  • #7
If I remember the subject is called Allometrics, which has tended to become something rather more general than the definition in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allometry .

Includes also things like life cycle studies, like why does a weasel live or mature in one year while the similar stoat's 'stotally different and does it in two years or the other way round - something which is observably evolving. If you are not in a hurry I will post reference to a book if I can find it.
 
  • #8
Aren't you referring to heart beats and life span? For instance a mouse lives on average about 2 years. An elephant lives about 50 (I think). However both have the same number of heart beats in a life time. However I doubt the mouse realizes that it lives only 2 years because it's heart is beating so fast that its perception of time is much much slower that ours or the elephant's.

I'm sure you remember when you were 5 that a period of a month or a year felt like 5 years now when you've grown up. Well, at least that's how it is for me. That's because when you are young your heart )as you very well know) beats much faster.
 
  • #9
s5s said:
Aren't you referring to heart beats and life span? For instance a mouse lives on average about 2 years. An elephant lives about 50 (I think). However both have the same number of heart beats in a life time. However I doubt the mouse realizes that it lives only 2 years because it's heart is beating so fast that its perception of time is much much slower that ours or the elephant's.

I'm sure you remember when you were 5 that a period of a month or a year felt like 5 years now when you've grown up. Well, at least that's how it is for me. That's because when you are young your heart )as you very well know) beats much faster.

In the sense that a faster heartbeat usually indicates a faster metabolism... and that = shorter life. It's not the size of the animal, but the nature of its metabolism. For mammals however... tiny usually means short-lived (relative to a human). Another measure is reproductive cycles, how rapid, how long until the onest of sexual maturity, etc.
 
  • #10
binbots said:
Koala: life span 17-20 years, weight 220-265 pounds
:bugeye: :bugeye: :bugeye: :bugeye: :bugeye:
 
  • #11
DaveC426913 said:
:bugeye: :bugeye: :bugeye: :bugeye: :bugeye:

Yeah, I think he missed a decimal... and um... everything else. From what I can find Koala weigh in at a hefty.. 17-26 pounds on average. So... Yeah. I'm not sure how we get from something we've all seen television hosts HOLD, to the weight of an obese HUMAN. The life-span was right however...
 
  • #12
IMG_6507.jpg
 
  • #13
DaveC426913 said:
IMG_6507.jpg

I'm thinking you'll have the 2010 humour humour award, and rightly so! :rofl:

Oh man... Thanks for the genuine laughing out loud...
 
  • #14
ahahhah, that was great.
 
  • #15
Um... is it just me or is that 'Koala' copping a serious feel in that woman's lap!? :biggrin:
 
  • #16
Folks, this discussion does have a serious theme at its core, but I think it is a bit too essentialistic. I doubt that the primary association of size/longevity is fundamental, even allowing for separating Murids from Meloids, Coliids from Colubrids, or Cephalopods from Psittacoids. You need to look at the evolutionary strategy and ecological constraints. There are arctic birches just centimetres high that live decades longer than tropical trees that last only a season or two.

There are too many considerations for me to go into, let alone cover properly. For a start, you must cover phylogeny as well as ontogeny. The former refers to how the creature evolved; if recently arose from a lineage that had a seasonal life cycle, then it is a good bet that it is not any sort of Methuselah. I suspect that this could have something to do with the short lives of say, large cuttlefish and octopuses, in spite of their high intelligence. The ontogeny is affected by how the creature grows. For example, most insects in warm temperate or tropical climes, such as many moths, that munch away at rich seasonal supplies of rich plant food, are multivoltine (several generations per year) whereas often species in seasonal climates are univoltine. In contrast, many insects that live in dry wood, such as Cerambycids, take several years to produce even a mature larva, and then may live for moths as an adult; dry wood is not a food that you bolt down by the mouthful, and there is precious little nutrition in a mouthful too. (I don’t even know offhand whether many of them have gut flora to assist them digest it!) But in any case, you can have a Deaths-head hawk moth caterpillar say, weighing in at tens of times the mass of a longicorn beetle larva, but living only a fraction as long. You can have a bat with less mass than a rat and a higher metabolic rate, outliving it by a factor of five to ten.

Now, the point is not that there are exceptions to the rule, but that we are looking at THE WRONG RULE! Again this is too big a subject for my available time, and also to big for me. But let's have a thunk...

By and large our strategy is: “Be conceived; be born; grow; reproduce; possibly enter diapause from time to time.”

That is pretty comprehensive, pretty simple, pretty conclusive.
Except for a few details...

With a hellll of a lot of devils in those details.

Be conceived? Be born? How? What is the probability of a successful conception? If it is low, very likely, either the nubile fraction of a creature’s life will be long, so that there is a decent chance of reproduction at all. Or the creature could disseminate gametes like crazy, in the hope that some out of millions might find a mate. But that is only one part of the creature’s life cycle. There are many strategies for dealing with the dilemmas. Mayflies for example typically have quite a long life cycle, most often about a year, in spite of their name: Ephemeroptera. It is only the adult stage that has a brief duration of a few days, in which they emerge in their teeming millions, of which only a fraction manage to mate and lay eggs (but LOTS of eggs!) Emperor moths of temperate zones similarly (tropical species commonly are multivoltine, temperate species univoltine), but they increase their chance of mating by assembling, females attracting males from sometimes considerable distances pheromonally (depending on how fussy your definition of pheromones might be). There are great hazards to the lives of most young stages, so there is a major attraction to producing them at long intervals so that specialist enemies have to keep in step with them. Consider the springtime flush of tender oak leaves, the annual day or two of termite or ant reproductive flight and so on. Then try arid-zone amphibians and crustaceans that only emerge from aestivation when it rains every several years. Consider 17-year cicadas.

That is one aspect that affects life spans in various ways. It does not have a really tight correlation with size, though it obviously affects size as well. You can’t expect an elephant or whale to grow to reproductive size in a season, but some antelope do so, even though they are a LOT bigger than foxes, scrub jays, or of course, cicadas. And they have to do well to live to reproduce more than once. And most of them reproduce almost in synchrony, so that the local carnivora must miss some of the youngsters. But as large animals go, they are ephemeral, nearly like cuttlefish (but not quite; they have only one young at a time, usually.

Grow? That means feeding. Most insects actually have a special phase of their ontogeny in which they specialise in growing to a necessary size and accumulating enough reserves for reproduction. Usually that is the larval stage. Compare that with frogs. And larval humans. Most larvae do not reproduce, and their rate of growth and length of survival is tuned to the necessary adult size and reproductive requirements for breeding resources. Elephants reproduce for decades each, eating all the time. Some small mammals reproduce once. So do most cephalopods, some of them about human-sized. Some animals change their diet from growth phase to reproductive phases, such as mosquitoes. Some feed when they reproduce, some before. All those factors affect or reflect their longevity.

One way in which size affects longevity is that the larger the animal, and in particular, the harder it comes by its food the longer it takes it to grow, so big animals TEND to be long-lived for that direct reason. There are partial exceptions, for example, some species of frigid-zone seals feed their young on milk so rich that they grow to a viable size within weeks.

Again, the more creatures are subject to predation, the shorter their lifespan as a rule. It is not worth tooling up for a long life if you probably won’t make it. Better invest in many offspring and quickly. Otherwise longevity is an attractive option, so we find that bats outlive mice grossly.

OK for now. Have I conveyed anything helpful? Look at any animals and work out how such principles hang together. It will make more sense as a rule than derivative variables such as counting heartbeats.

Cheers,

Jon
 
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  • #17
thanks for the responses. Very informative. It seems there are to many factors to ever find finite patterns. Also thanks for the Koala pic, that was to funny.
 
  • #18
binbots said:
thanks for the responses. Very informative. It seems there are to many factors to ever find finite patterns. Also thanks for the Koala pic, that was to funny.
You are welcome, but if you take a serious interest in these matters, don't give up too easily. Sure, there is no simple, universal size/longevity relationship, but each species lives a life in which a lot of such relationships are vital. Keep watching and keep wondering and thinking.
It can be rewarding in more ways than you might expect.

Go well,

Jon
 

1. What is the average life span of a human?

The average life span of a human is currently around 72 years, but this can vary depending on factors such as genetics, lifestyle, and access to healthcare.

2. How does the life span of humans compare to other animals?

Humans have a longer life span compared to most other animals. On average, larger animals tend to have longer life spans than smaller animals, but there are exceptions to this rule.

3. Is there a correlation between an animal's size and its life span?

Yes, there is a general correlation between an animal's size and its life span. Larger animals tend to have longer life spans than smaller animals, but there are exceptions to this rule and other factors can also play a role.

4. What is the significance of studying life span and size ratios in animals?

Studying life span and size ratios in animals can provide insights into the aging process and potential longevity in humans. It can also help us understand the impact of factors such as diet, environment, and genetics on life span.

5. Are there any notable differences in life span and size ratios between different species?

Yes, there are notable differences in life span and size ratios between different species. For example, some species of turtles can live for over 100 years, while smaller animals like mice have much shorter life spans. Additionally, some species may have longer life spans for their size compared to other species.

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