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Avian telomere dynamics
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Abstract
- Telomeres, the repetitive DNA sequences that cap eukaryotic chromosomes, are thought to play an important role in linking life conditions and senescence. In vertebrate somatic cells, telomeres shorten at each cell division, and the rate at which they do so has been linked to cellular and organismal senescence. Although telomeres generally shorten with age in vertebrates, in most species studied there is considerable variation between same age individuals. In this thesis, I examined the telomere dynamics of various avian species, investigating both the causes of variation in telomere length among individuals and what effect this variation has on attributes such as survival rates. Previous studies have shown that most telomere loss occurs in young individuals and it thus makes sense that early life conditions are responsible for much of the inter-individual variation in telomere length. I investigated this idea by studying chick telomere dynamics in a wild population of lesser black-backed gulls Larus fuscus. There was considerable variation in hatching telomere length among individuals and much of this variation was related to circumstances during embryonic growth. Larger hatchlings had shorter telomere lengths, suggesting that embryonic growth rate could have affected telomere attrition. Independent of this trend, males had longer telomeres at hatching than females. Although telomere length did decrease with age post-hatching, these initial variations remained consistent during the initial post-hatching period. The relationship between early life conditions and telomere length was investigated further with a longitudinal study of telomere length in chicks of the European shag Phalacrocorax aritotelis. A previous study on this population of birds had shown that telomere length declines with age within individuals over a period of several years. However no change in telomere length was detected over a period of 11-13 days during the chick period. Body size had no effe
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1140934718
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource