The long lives of primates and the ‘invariant rate of ageing’ hypothesis

Fernando Colchero(University of Southern Denmark), Susan C. Alberts(Duke University), Susan Perry(University of California, Los Angeles), Tara S. Stoinski(The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International), Martin N. Muller(University of New Mexico), Christophe Boesch(Public Risk Management Association), Dalia A. Conde(University of Southern Denmark), Claudia Fichtel(German Primate Center), Klaus Zuberbühler(Natural Resources Conservation Service), Peter M. Kappeler(German Primate Center), Roman M. Wittig(University of St Andrews), Anthony Collins(The Jane Goodall Institute), Thomas Breuer(Wildlife Conservation Society), Fernando A. Campos(Duke University), Rebecca J. Lewis(Université de Fianarantsoa), Catherine Hobaiter(University of St Andrews), Zarin Machanda(Harvard University), Richard J. Parnell(Wildlife Conservation Society Congo), Martha M. Robbins(Public Risk Management Association), Elizabeth A. Archie(University of Notre Dame), Shirley C. Strum(Kenya Wildlife Service), Richard R. Lawler(James Madison University), Marina Cords(Columbia University), Craig Packer(University of Minnesota), Catherine Crockford(University of St Andrews), Emma J. Stokes(Wildlife Conservation Society), Anne E. Pusey(Duke University), Francisco Villavicencio(Johns Hopkins University), Richard W. Wrangham(Harvard University), Milou Groenenberg(Wildlife Conservation Society Congo), Jenny Tung(Duke University), Johanna Staerk(University of Southern Denmark), José Manuel Aburto(University of Southern Denmark), Marie L. Manguette(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), James W. Vaupel(Duke University), Melissa Emery Thompson(University of New Mexico), Joan B. Silk(Arizona State University), Linda M. Fedigan(University of Calgary), Robert M. Seyfarth(University of Pennsylvania), Karen B. Strier(University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Nature Communications
June 16, 2021
Cited by 90


Related Papers