中文(繁體)
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Science of aging knowledge environment : SAGE KE 2004-May

Declining immunity with age in the wild.

只有註冊用戶可以翻譯文章
登陸註冊
鏈接已保存到剪貼板
Donna Holmes
Steven Austad

關鍵詞

抽象

Despite their higher metabolic rates and lifetime energy expenditures, birds generally outlive similar-sized mammals even in the wild, often reaching maturity and aging considerably more slowly. Wild populations of many bird species have been monitored for years using banding-and-recapture methods, allowing field ornithologists to document age-related declines in survival and reproductive success. Although elderly birds rarely reach advanced stages of senescence in nature, many show other signs of physiological deterioration. In this Perspective, we review recent reports of aging-related changes in the immune response of two small European songbirds, the barn swallow and the collared flycatcher. Researchers in both studies challenged birds' humoral immune response by administering antigen to free-ranging adults during the breeding season. Older barn swallows--particularly breeding females--showed lower antibody responses (both primary and secondary) to vaccination with Newcastle disease virus, an avian pathogen. In flycatchers, older females raised lower antibody titers than younger breeders did in response to an injection of sheep red blood cells, a nonpathogenic antigen, and produced offspring with lower average body masses. Although the relevance of such measures of "immunosenescence" to actual fitness, reproductive success, and mortality is still unclear, studies of wild vertebrate populations may ultimately provide an important link between laboratory research and our understanding of the natural history and evolution of basic mechanisms of aging.

加入我們的臉書專頁

科學支持的最完整的草藥數據庫

  • 支持55種語言
  • 科學支持的草藥療法
  • 通過圖像識別草藥
  • 交互式GPS地圖-在位置標記草藥(即將推出)
  • 閱讀與您的搜索相關的科學出版物
  • 通過藥效搜索藥草
  • 組織您的興趣並及時了解新聞研究,臨床試驗和專利

輸入症狀或疾病,並閱讀可能有用的草藥,輸入草藥並查看其所針對的疾病和症狀。
*所有信息均基於已發表的科學研究

Google Play badgeApp Store badge