Living longer comes easier
Evolutionary anthropologist Oskar Burger and his team wanted to study human longevity in an evolutionary context. So they turned to previously gathered data on chimpanzees, hunter-gatherer societies in parts of Africa and South America and numbers from the Human Mortality Database for Japan, Sweden and France.
The data reveal a steady, gradual drop in the probability of dying relatively young that begins just before 1900 for the French and Swedes. But the mortality numbers for hunter-gatherers remain closer to wild chimpanzees than to these westernized societies. However, when the researchers looked at hunter-gatherer groups who received some western medicine and occasional help with food, the mortality in those groups dropped, widening the gap between them and chimps and bumping them up to numbers comparable with pre-1900 Sweden and France.
“It’s amazing what clean water and a bit of extra food gets you,” says Burger, of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany. A 30-year-old hunter-gatherer has the same probability of death as a Japanese person today who is 72 years old, the study found. At 15, a hunter-gatherer has a 1.3 percent chance of dying in the next year; Swedes hit those odds at age 69.
Surprisingly, the research also suggests that there’s room for improvement, and that the upper limit on healthy human living has yet to be reached. Aging theory suggests that the biological machinery should increasingly break down once a person passes the age of reproducing and caring for young (SN: 10/20/12, p. 16). But for some reason, humans seem to have become exceptionally good at dodging that bullet.
And researchers may even be able to extend human lifespans even longer with insights from ongoing research into the cellular switches and genes that extend the lives of roundworms and rodents in the lab. “It may not be that difficult to continue to slow the rate of mortality,” says molecular biologist Brian Kennedy of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging in Novato, Calif. “I still believe very strongly that it’s going to be possible to manipulate healthy lifespan.”
By Rachel Ehrenberg