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When I said "the theory", I meant the classic thought about why and when organisms age.
I'll now adress what you said below, in order to be clearer:
"You'll recall that a baseline definition for aging is an increase in mortality rate with time"
Agreed.
"which doesn't happen for these urchins, or at least to any degree that can be detected via study methods at the present level of funding."
Agreed.
"This presents a challenge for the classic interpretation of the evolution of aging..."
Here is where I don't agree. The reason is we simply don't know what is the average lifespan of the lobster/urchins in nature (without human predation).
It could be that for these animals, "X" is 300 years (see my #3 point in earlier post), so aging phenotypes will be hard to discover (especially without proper funding) for those younger than 300 years. Ideally we need to get them to the lab, to a controlled and protected environment, and let them live for 500 years. It could be that after 300-400 years or so, we'll start to see significant signs of aging. Of course this is not practical.
What we're doing now with the lobsters/urchins, might be similar to taking an 18 year old human person, inspect him, and say that because he does not show signs of aging, humans don't age.
Of course if we take a 50 year old human, we'll not say this, but, the equivalent for a 50 year old human, in lobsters/urchins, might be a 300-400 year old lobster/urchin, and we simply don't have them to inspect (since in nature they die before such age, from external death factors, and also, it's not practical to grow them at the protected environment of the lab to prove that they do age, because they live too long).
To conclude, my entire point here is that in order to explain why we can't detect aging in the lobsters/urchins we can put our hands on currently, there might be no need to extend the classic interpretation of the evolution of aging, because it might be at work here, just on a "larger timescale".
[Posted by: Noam at June 18, 2008 3:53 PM]
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