Dinosaurs and the mammal longevity gap, Evolutionary Biology - Guest Associate Professor Molly Burke
Whimsical Wavelengths - A Science Podcast by Volcanologist & Geophysicist: Jeffrey Mark Zurek, PhD, PGeo | Science Communicator
Episode notes
The Longevity Bottleneck Hypothesis, DNA repair mechanisms, and the evolutionary shadows cast by the Mesozoic Era lead our journey into why mammals age the way they do. We dive into a provocative theory suggesting that 150 million years of being "dino-snacks" might have permanently shortened our ancestral lifespans.
Dr. Molly Burke, an evolutionary biologist from Oregon State University, joins the show to explain how natural selection acts like a "tuner" for longevity. We discuss experimental evolution using fruit flies and yeast, exploring how shifting the age of reproduction can increase or decrease lifespan in just a few generations.
Topics
The Mesozoic Bottleneck: Hypothesis that early mammals lost long-life genes because rapid repr ...
Keywords
biologyscience communicationNatural SelectionEvolutionary BiologySenescenceLongevity BottleneckGenetic DriftDNA RepairModel OrganismsOrthologs