Skip to content
Animal Animal WelfareRights, Science

Oldies but goodies: Study shows why elderly animals offer crucial scientific insights

Charles Darwin University 2 mins read

A new study on ageing in the animal kingdom has highlighted how urgently Earth’s oldest and wises creatures must be protected, with knowledge and environmental stability lost due to human intervention.

The new study, led by Charles Darwin University’s (CDU) Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods (RIEL), explores the consequences of the loss of old, often large and wise animals in the wild and the value these individuals have to scientific knowledge, biodiversity and more.

Humans are responsible for the decline of these animals. The review explains how in freshwater and ocean environments, the oldest age-classes of fish have been depleted in most populations, and extremely old corals are being harvested and are irreplaceable within human lifespans.

On land, poaching, trophy hunting, predator hunting and recreational harvests are responsible for the loss of other types of old animals. On land and sea, old animal decline is also caused by habitat loss, disease, extreme climate events. 

Lead author Dr R. Keller Kopf, an ecologist and senior lecturer with CDU and RIEL, said older animals offer unique biological functions and ecological knowledge, and provide important services humans rely on.

“In addition to their intrinsic biodiversity value and slower rate of recovery in response to human activities, the loss of old animals ultimately threatens the long-term sustainability and stability of ecosystems on which humans depend,” Dr Kopf said.

“They are especially important for ecosystem services such as fisheries whereby old individuals appear to provide the stability to populations, yet they are selectively harvested”

Dr Kopf said these older individuals offer insights into a variety of areas, including reproduction, behaviour, knowledge and social structures, and their roles in ecosystems.

“Old individuals of long-lived species such as elephants, whales and humans accumulate knowledge over long time-periods, and - among many other benefits - this allows them to provide better care of their off-spring or grand-offspring,” Dr Kopf said.

“In some of these species, especially humans, grandmothers increase the probability of grand offspring surviving and going on to reproduce. In fish and other cold-blooded animals, older individuals generally continue to grow throughout life, and this allows them to increase the number of offspring they produce.”

Dr Kopf said management strategies and policies would need a long-term approach, into years and decades, for the successful conservation of these animals.

“A new method of conservation management and policy is required, which we refer to as ‘longevity conservation’,” Dr Kopf said.

“The International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List, and United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity must begin to recognize ‘longevity depletion’ a global threat to biodiversity and the sustainability of life on Earth.

“Fisheries management agencies should develop policy and assessment approaches to recognise and prevent ‘longevity overfishing’ - it is currently not recognized as a type of overfishing but is a likely cause of fisheries collapse and increasing volatility.”

The study was conducted with an interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Exeter, Charles Sturt University, Macquarie University, the Amboseli Trust for Elephants in Kenya, University of Stirling, and Texas A&M University.

Loss of Earth’s old, wise and large animals was published in the journal Science.


Contact details:

Raphaella Saroukos she/her
Research Communications Officer
Marketing, Media & Communications
Larrakia Country
T: +61 8 8946 6721
E: media@cdu.edu.au
W: cdu.edu.au

Media

More from this category

  • Animal Animal WelfareRights
  • 23/12/2024
  • 18:26
Stop Live Exports

Advocacy group sounds alarm over cattle boarding ship in scorching heat

Not-for-profit organisation Stop Live Exports has condemned the loading of scores of cattle onto a ship off Perth’s coast during a scorching hot summer day. On Monday, cattle were witnessed being loaded onto the Gudali Express at Fremantle Port where temperatures nearby soared into the high 30s to low 40s. The Gudali Express is a live export vessel that has the capacity to transport thousands of cattle. Stop Live Exports spokesperson Ruth Gourley said: “It’s absolutely outrageous and intolerable that cattle are being loaded onto a ship at Fremantle Port on such an unbearably hot day. "Moving cattle onto a…

  • Biotechnology, Science
  • 23/12/2024
  • 09:00
Brandon Capital

CUREator + deploys $18.5 million in its first funding round

MELBOURNE, Australia — 23 December 2024 CUREator +, has announced that eight local startups developing innovations with the potential to save lives and improve wellbeing will receive grants totalling $18.5 million in its first funding round. CUREator+, delivered in partnership with Brandon BioCatalyst and ANDHealth, is a national program focused on accelerating the research translation and commercialisation of preclinical and clinical early-stage Australian medical research and medical innovations with commercial potential. These innovations include drugs (novel and repurposed), devices, diagnostics and digital technologies that address unmet needs. Enabling rapid assessment of the efficacy of cancer treatments AI-powered platform providing early…

  • Animal Animal WelfareRights, General News
  • 23/12/2024
  • 06:00
Communicado on behalf of Petstock

BUSTING SUMMER PET MYTHS: Essential Tips To Keep Your Pets Safe And Cool

As the weather heats up, so can our pets, and each year it’s a timely reminder to keep an eye on our smallest family…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.