Publication | Closed Access
Heat-Induced Longevity Extension in Drosophila. I. Heat Treatment, Mortality, and Thermotolerance
182
Citations
16
References
1997
Year
BiologyMild Thermal StressLifespan ExtensionHyperthermiaFitnessLongevitySurvival DataPhysiologyEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyHeat-induced Longevity ExtensionNatural SciencesReproduction ResponseHeat TreatmentComparative Physiology
Survival data were collected on a total of 28,000 Drosophila melanogaster adults in order to investigate mortality patterns and induced physiological responses after a mild thermal stress. A brief, nonlethal heat treatment extends adult life span at normal temperatures by an average of 2 days (64), compared to nontreated controls of the same genotypes. Life expectancy is extended as a demographic consequence of reduced age-specific mortality over a period of up to several weeks after the heat treatment. Heat treatment also increases tolerance to subsequent, more severe thermal stress. Observations on single-sex populations suggest that heat-induced longevity extension is independent of the suppression of reproductive activity.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1