Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Baboons. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Baboons. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 24 de abril de 2016

NSF: Discovery :- Rough childhoods can have ripple effects for wild baboons.- Infancias ásperas pueden tener un efecto dominó para los babuinos salvajes

Hola amigos: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., El trauma infantil puede tener efectos sobre la salud de los adultos y la supervivencia en los seres humanos de gran envergadura, los estudios han demostrado. Ahora, una nueva investigación del mismo es cierto para los babuinos salvajes.
Las personas que sufren de abuso infantil, negligencia y otras características de una infancia difícil son más propensos a desarrollar enfermedades del corazón, diabetes y otros problemas de salud más adelante en la vida, incluso después de los acontecimientos estresantes anteriores han pasado, según la investigación.
Un nuevo estudio revela que los babuinos salvajes que sufren múltiples desgracias durante los primeros años de vida, tales como la sequía o las pérdidas de sus madres, a llevar una vida mucho más cortos - hasta una diferencia de 10 años en la esperanza de vida en comparación con sus compañeros más afortunados.
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Baboons who experience drought, loss of mothers, live shorter lives
A four-month-old infant baboon rides on its mother's back in Amboseli, Kenya.
A four-month-old infant baboon rides on its mother's back in Amboseli, Kenya.
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April 19, 2016
Childhood trauma can have far-reaching effects on adult health and survival in humans, studies have shown. Now, new research finds the same is true for wild baboons.
People who experience childhood abuse, neglect and other hallmarks of a rough childhood are more likely to develop heart disease, diabetes and other health problems later in life, even after the stressful events have passed, previous research shows.
A new study finds that wild baboons who experience multiple misfortunes during the first years of life, such as drought or losses of their mothers, live much shorter lives -- up to a 10-year difference in life expectancy compared with their more fortunate peers.
 
Baboon and human similarities
 
"This suggests that human adult health effects from childhood stresses are not simply products of the modern environment, but have likely been present throughout our evolutionary history," said George Gilchrist, program director in the National Science Foundation (NSF) Division of Environmental Biology, which funded the research.
The results are important because they show that early adversity can have long-term negative effects on survival even in the absence of differences in smoking, drinking or medical care -- factors commonly evoked to explain similar patterns in humans, said Jenny Tung, an evolutionary biologist at Duke University.
Tung co-authored a paper reporting the findings, published this week in the journal Nature Communications.
The conclusions come from a long-term study of 196 wild female baboons monitored on a nearly daily basis between 1983 and 2013 near Amboseli National Park in southern Kenya.
Life isn't easy for a wild baboon, the scientists found. Like many animals on the African savanna, baboons endure drought, overcrowding, disease and predation.
 
Sources of early adversity
 
The researchers focused on six potential sources of early adversity. Some baboons, for example, saw very little rainfall in their first year of life, or experienced stiff competition for resources because of sibling spacing or rising numbers within their group. Others lost their mothers to death or illness, or had moms with lower rank or little social support.
More than three-fourths of the baboons in the study had at least one of the six early risk factors; 15 percent had three or more.
Baboons who lost their mothers before age four, or whose next-born sibling arrived before they were fully weaned, were found to be the most vulnerable.
For baboons, like humans, the tougher the childhood, the higher the risks of premature death later in life.
Young females who experienced just one or no adverse events -- a group the researchers nicknamed the "silver spoon kids" -- generally lived into their late teens and early twenties, whereas those that endured three or more adverse events often died by age nine.
The "bad luck" babies not only lost more than 10 years from their adult lives, they also had fewer surviving offspring. "It's a snowball effect," said co-author Elizabeth Archie of the University of Notre Dame.
Two females named Puma and Mystery, for example, were both born during years of little rainfall, and raised by low-ranking moms who died before the youngsters' third birthdays.
Puma eventually met her end at age seven in the jaws of a leopard. Mystery lived until her disappearance at age 14, presumably to a predator, leaving behind a single infant who died shortly thereafter.
 
Childhood stress in baboons -- and humans
 
Some researchers studying the effects of childhood stress on adult human health pin the blame on differences in medical care or risky behavior. People who had troubled childhoods, the thinking goes, are more likely to turn to drugs, alcohol or other coping mechanisms that are bad for their health.
But wild baboons don't smoke or binge on junk food, and they don't carry health insurance. This supports the idea that differences in lifestyle and medical care are only part of the story, said co-author Susan Alberts of Duke.
Baboon females that experienced the most misfortune in their early years were also more socially isolated as adults, suggesting that social support may also be at play.
Along with paper co-author Jeanne Altmann of Princeton, the team plans to investigate how some baboons manage to overcome early adversity. It could be that those who form and maintain supportive relationships as they grow older are better able to survive and thrive, Archie said.
Baboon DNA is 94 percent similar to that of humans, which indicates these patterns could be deeply rooted in primate physiology, the researchers believe.
-- Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734
 cdybas@nsf.gov
-- Robin Smith, Duke University (919) 681-8057
 robin.a.smith@duke.edu
Investigators Jenny Tung
Susan Alberts
Related Institutions/Organizations Duke University
Related Awards #1405308 EAGER: New Methods for Genomic Analysis of Noninvasive Samples
Total Grants $292,778
Related WebsitesNSF Discovery: Born during a drought: Bad news for baboons: https://nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=134000&org=NSF
Members of a baboon group in Amboseli relax and groom together
Members of a baboon group in Amboseli relax and groom together, a primary means of social bonding.
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An adult female baboon with her two-month-old infant
An adult female baboon with her two-month-old infant, who has just learned to climb on her back.
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Two adult female baboons and an infant rest in the shade while a third female approaches.
Two adult female baboons and an infant rest in the shade while a third female approaches.
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Two adult female baboons groom together while an adult male and several offspring rest nearby.
Two adult female baboons groom together while an adult male and several offspring rest nearby.
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An adult female greets a companion who has a new infant.
An adult female greets a companion who has a new infant.
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the National Science Foundation (NSF)
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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domingo, 5 de abril de 2015

nsf.gov - National Science Foundation - Born during a drought: Bad news for baboons .- Nacido durante una sequía: Malas noticias para los babuinos

Hola amigos: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., hemos recibido información de la Fundación Nacional de Ciencias de Los Estados Unidos, donde han descubierto que los monos Babuinos, hicieron frente a sequias en el Desierto de Mojave en  Kenya.
NSF, nos dice: El dicho "lo que no te mata te hace más fuerte" no puede soportar a un escrutinio científico.Después de las llanuras del sur de Kenia experimentaron una grave sequía en 2009, que tuvo un efecto terrible en la vida silvestre, los investigadores observaron cómo 50 babuinos salvajes hicieron frente a la sequía, y si las condiciones que se enfrentaron en la infancia juegan un papel.
La sabana semiárida del sur de Kenia por lo general recibe un promedio de 14 pulgadas de lluvia al año - similares a gran parte de Nebraska o Kansas - pero en 2009 se redujo a cinco centímetros, menos que el desierto de Mojave.
El año anterior no fue mucho mejor: las lluvias en 2008 se redujo a la mitad de los niveles normales.


More information..........
Findings have implications for human health
Baboon group in Amboseli, Kenya
Baboon group in Amboseli, Kenya, drinking from rainpools that are slowly drying up in a drought.
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April 1, 2015
The saying "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" may not hold up to scientific scrutiny.
After the plains of southern Kenya experienced a severe drought in 2009 that took a terrible toll on wildlife, researchers looked at how 50 wild baboons coped with the drought, and whether the conditions they faced in infancy played a role.
The semi-arid savanna of southern Kenya usually receives an average of 14 inches of rain a year--akin to much of Nebraska or Kansas--but in 2009 it fell to five inches, less than the Mojave Desert.
The year before wasn't much better: rainfall in 2008 dropped to half normal levels.
 
Grasslands withered
 
The grasslands the animals depend on for food dried up and watering holes disappeared, leaving many animals starving or weak from hunger.
"We lost 98 percent of the wildebeest population, 75 percent of the zebra population and 30 percent of the elephant population," said Susan Alberts, a biologist at Duke University. "It was impossible to go anywhere without smelling death."
Most baboons made it, but the drought left them underweight and many females stopped ovulating.
In a forthcoming paper in the journal American Naturalist, the researchers compared two groups of females--one group born during low rainfall years, the other born during normal rainfall years.
 
Born in a drought
 
All females in the study were adults by time of the 2009 drought, but those born in lean times fared worse in 2009 than those born in times of plenty, the researchers found.
"This study demonstrates lifetime fertility reductions for baboons born during stressful conditions or to low-ranking mothers," said George Gilchrist, program director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Environmental Biology, which funded the research along with NSF's Divisions of Integrative Organismal Systems and Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences.
"These 'disadvantaged' early life experiences are linked with less resilience to stressful conditions experienced as adults."
During the 2009 drought, baboons born during low rainfall years were 60 percent less likely to become pregnant, whereas pregnancy rates dipped by only 10 percent for females born during normal rainfall years.
Drought babies born to higher-status mothers were less affected by the 2009 event.
"It might be that baboons born to higher-ranked moms have better access to food, or suffer lower levels of social stress," Alberts said.
 
Implications for human health
 
The findings also help explain why people who are malnourished in early childhood go on to have higher rates of obesity, diabetes and heart disease as adults.
Some researchers argue that human babies conceived or born in lean times are programmed for food shortages later in life.
They develop a "thrifty metabolism," aimed at storing fat and conserving energy in order to survive starvation.
Things go awry, the thinking goes, only when the environments they experienced as infants and as adults don't match, such as when a child conceived in famine grows up and eats an excess of cheeseburgers, said paper co-author Amanda Lea, a biologist at Duke.
But the baboon fertility study lends support to another idea, namely that kids who don't get enough to eat during their first year of life are simply less resilient as adults than their counterparts.
"The data suggest that early adversity carries lifelong costs," said co-author Jenny Tung, a biologist at Duke.
"It's bad to be born in bad times, but with the right social or economic environment, that can be mitigated," Alberts added.
Jeanne Altmann of Princeton University is also a co-author of the paper.
In addition to NSF, the National Institute on Aging in Bethesda, Md.; Duke University; Princeton University; and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research supported the research.
-- Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734 cdybas@nsf.gov
-- Robin Ann Smith, Duke University (919) 681-8057 ras10@duke.edu
Investigators Jenny Tung
Susan Alberts
Related Institutions/Organizations Duke University
Related Programs Biological Anthropology
A juvenile and an infant baboon play together on a tree snag
A juvenile and an infant baboon play together on a tree snag in Amboseli.
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Adolescent female baboon grooming her mother.
Adolescent female baboon grooming her mother.
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Adult female baboon with a one-day-old infant, sitting with an adult male baboon.
Adult female baboon with a one-day-old infant, sitting with an adult male baboon.
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Infant baboon reaching toward an older juvenile who is feeding.
Infant baboon reaching toward an older juvenile who is feeding.
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Juvenile male baboon holding his young infant brother.
Juvenile male baboon holding his young infant brother.
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The National Science Foundation (NSF)
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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