• Home
  • World
  • UK
  • Business
  • Climate
  • Science
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
Global News

‘I must stay strong’: hardship for workers fleeing Sri Lanka’s broken economy | Sri Lanka

June 25, 2022

Protests follow US Supreme Court’s move to overturn abortion protection as clinics begin to close | US News

June 25, 2022

‘The Russians could come any time’: fear at Suwałki Gap on EU border | Poland

June 25, 2022
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Business Times
  • Home
  • World

    ‘I must stay strong’: hardship for workers fleeing Sri Lanka’s broken economy | Sri Lanka

    June 25, 2022

    Protests follow US Supreme Court’s move to overturn abortion protection as clinics begin to close | US News

    June 25, 2022

    ‘The Russians could come any time’: fear at Suwałki Gap on EU border | Poland

    June 25, 2022

    World leaders condemn US abortion ruling as ‘backwards step’ | Abortion

    June 25, 2022

    Eighteen killed as throng of migrants storms Spain’s Melilla border from Morocco | Spain

    June 25, 2022
  • UK

    ‘Out in a year’: what the papers say about Tory vote on Boris Johnson | Boris Johnson

    June 7, 2022

    ASDA boss slams proposed law that could make shopping harder ‘for anyone under 40’

    June 7, 2022

    County Derry businesses take action following Michaela McAreavey video

    June 7, 2022

    Colchester murder probe: Antonella Castelvedere, 52, named

    June 7, 2022

    Care for 2m Britons with long Covid ‘woefully inadequate’, say top nurses | Long Covid

    June 7, 2022
  • Business

    Train services cut as RMT rail strike enters third day | Rail strikes

    June 25, 2022

    Removal of mortgage stress test ‘will not result in free-for-all’ | Mortgages

    June 25, 2022

    Oxford Street risks becoming ‘dinosaur district’, warns M&S boss

    June 25, 2022

    Barclays to buy UK specialist lender Kensington Mortgages

    June 25, 2022

    Man cuts his energy bill to almost £0 thanks to his car – as price cap set to hit £3,000

    June 25, 2022
  • Climate
  • Science

    Computer Science academics at Edge Hill University secure £180,000 grant

    June 25, 2022

    Earth’s oldest known wildfires raged 430 million years ago

    June 25, 2022

    Chinese neuroscientist receives 2022 UNESCO For Women in Science Award

    June 25, 2022

    Want to Raise Successful Kids? Science Says Use These 3 Key Phrases Constantly

    June 25, 2022

    Glasgow Science Centre: Looking at phantom limb pain and how technology can help

    June 25, 2022
  • Health

    This Simple 10 Second Balance Test Can Tell if Your Risk of Death Is Double

    June 25, 2022

    Dyslexia isn’t a disorder, it’s part of our species’ cultural evolution, say researchers

    June 25, 2022

    DR MICHAEL MOSLEY: I’d have my brain zapped if it helped me quit my chocolate addiction

    June 25, 2022

    ‘Polio left me unable to walk at 5 – its return to UK sent shivers down my spine’

    June 24, 2022

    Motorbike rider, 48, ruptured his TESTICLE after losing control and ploughing into a wall

    June 24, 2022
  • Tech

    Epic Games Store Releases Two Free Games, Announces Next Week’s Two Games

    June 25, 2022

    Xbox Series X/S Outselling PS5 In Japan As Sony Hammered By Supply Issues

    June 25, 2022

    Windows 11 will now tell if your computer is DirectStorage capable.

    June 25, 2022

    Fans are going wild for NEW iPhone photo trick – how to use it

    June 25, 2022

    Memory Pak: After 20 Years, Eternal Darkness Really Deserves A Second Life

    June 25, 2022
  • Entertainment

    Blind date: ‘I reached in my bag and realised I only had one shoe’ | Relationships

    June 25, 2022

    Glastonbury live: Paul McCartney age, setlist and BBC stream

    June 25, 2022

    EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Joy for Prince Philip’s confidante as son Nicholas Knatchbull welcomes baby boy

    June 25, 2022

    Glastonbury fans and businesses which rely on festivals are seeing the effects of the cost of living crisis | UK News

    June 25, 2022

    Ex-Spandau Ballet singer Ross William Wild in court charged with rape & sexually assaulting sleeping women

    June 25, 2022
  • Sports

    Man Utd boss Erik ten Hag may have two Michael Carricks in his team next season | Football | Sport

    June 25, 2022

    Gary Neville and Roy Keane disagree over what Kalvin Phillips transfer will offer Man City

    June 25, 2022

    Romelu Lukaku’s transfer leaves Manchester United with easy decisions to make – Samuel Luckhurst

    June 25, 2022

    Gabriel Jesus signing date suggested as Tottenham rival Arsenal for Raphinha transfer

    June 25, 2022

    Man City agree deal to sign Kalvin Phillips, as respected source reveals transfer fee and Leeds succession plan

    June 25, 2022
The Business Times
You are at:Home»Science»Why do parrots live so long?
Science

Why do parrots live so long?

StaffBy StaffMay 23, 2022No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Why do parrots live so long?
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Parrots are exceptionally long-lived, sometimes becoming septuagenarians or even octogenarians. In animals, longevity is often linked to a larger body size, but parrots often live as long as larger birds and much longer than birds of comparable size.

So, why do parrots live so long? They’re already known for their mimicking abilities and gorgeous colors. Do any of these play a role in their longevity?

It turns out their long lives may be due to another of their famous traits — their impressive smarts, a March 2022 study in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences found.

In general, birds usually live much longer than mammals of the same size. “This is probably because they can fly and escape predators” unlike Earth-bound mammals, said study lead author Simeon Smeele, an evolutionary ecologist at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior in Radolfzell, Germany. “For instance, sulphur-crested cockatoos can live up to 70 to 80 years in extreme cases, but they only weigh 700 to 1,000 grams [1.5 to 2.2 pounds]. Humans weigh 100 times more, but only live a few decades longer.”

Related: Are birds dinosaurs?

Here we see a sulphur-crested cockatoo feeding on a old sunflower.

Sulphur-crested cockatoos can live up to 80 years in extreme cases. (Image credit: Hadi Zaher via Getty Images)

Parrots, in turn, live unusually long for birds. For instance, whereas the American robin (Turdus migratorius), one of the most common birds in North America, on average lives only about two years, the parrot known as the rosy-faced lovebird (Agapornis roseicollis) “lives on average eight years, but is considerably smaller than the robin,” Smeele said.

The longest-lived parrots live 20 to 30 years, on average. “There are other birds that can do this, but they are much larger,” Smeele said. “For example, a flamingo weighs about four times more than the longest-lived parrots, but has about the same lifespan.”

(Such average lifespans do not represent maximum lifespans. “If they make it past the first year, robins, flamingos and parrots can live much longer,” Smeele said.)

Previous research suggested that longevity is linked to brain size in a range of animals, perhaps because larger brains helped them find food or escape threats. Although parrots are known for both their longevity and their complex behaviors, with brain-to-body size ratios on par with those seen in primates, it was unclear if the two traits influenced one another. This is because the lack of lifespan data on large numbers of parrots made it difficult for scientists to account for what might drive longevity in the group.

In the study, the researchers teamed up with wildlife conservation nonprofit group Species360 to compile data from more than 130,000 individual parrots in more than 1,000 zoos around the world. This database helped them produce the first reliable estimates of the average lifespans of 217 parrot species, representing more than half of all known species.

The findings revealed great diversity in parrot life expectancy, ranging from an average of two years for the fig parrot (a group with two genera: Cyclopsitta and Psittaculirostris) up to an average of 30 years for the scarlet macaw (Ara macao). Other long-lived species include the sulphur-crested cockatoo (Cacatua galerita) from Australia, which lives 25 years, on average. 

Possessing relatively large brains was consistently associated with greater life expectancy in parrots, the team found. This hints that smarter birds can better solve problems in the wild, helping them enjoy longer lives.

“It really suggests that larger brains can help you live longer,” Smeele said. 

One alternative possibility the researchers explored was that relatively large brains take longer to grow, and therefore require longer lifespans. However, the researchers found no links between longevity and developmental time or related parental investment.

“I would have expected that parental care was much more important,” Smeele said. In contrast, in primates, the increased costs needed to develop a large brain is linked with longevity, he noted.

In the future, the scientists want to see if more social parrots have larger brains and live longer. “We think that species that live in complex groups could learn a lot of skills — how to forage, how to become dominant, and so on — but this learning would take time and a large brain,” Smeele said.

Smeele cautions that “it would be tempting to say that smarter people also live longer, but this might very well not be the case. A larger brain actually burns more energy, and that could potentially be harmful. This has been shown in guppies, where larger individuals of the same species lived shorter.”

Originally published on Live Science.

live long parrots

Related Posts

Computer Science academics at Edge Hill University secure £180,000 grant

By StaffJune 25, 2022

Glastonbury live: Paul McCartney age, setlist and BBC stream

By StaffJune 25, 2022

Earth’s oldest known wildfires raged 430 million years ago

By StaffJune 25, 2022

Chinese neuroscientist receives 2022 UNESCO For Women in Science Award

By StaffJune 25, 2022
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Categories
  • Business (1,924)
  • Climate (79)
  • Entertainment (2,247)
  • Health (1,426)
  • Science (2,450)
  • Sports (2,949)
  • Technology (2,608)
  • Uncategorized (1)
  • United Kingdom (1,995)
  • World (2,095)
Don't Miss

‘I must stay strong’: hardship for workers fleeing Sri Lanka’s broken economy | Sri Lanka

By StaffJune 25, 2022

Suvendra Mary has not changed her clothes, nor has she had a decent meal in…

Man Utd boss Erik ten Hag may have two Michael Carricks in his team next season | Football | Sport

June 25, 2022

Train services cut as RMT rail strike enters third day | Rail strikes

June 25, 2022

Gary Neville and Roy Keane disagree over what Kalvin Phillips transfer will offer Man City

June 25, 2022
United Kingdom

‘Out in a year’: what the papers say about Tory vote on Boris Johnson | Boris Johnson

By StaffJune 7, 2022

ASDA boss slams proposed law that could make shopping harder ‘for anyone under 40’

By StaffJune 7, 2022

County Derry businesses take action following Michaela McAreavey video

By StaffJune 7, 2022
The Business Times
Copyright ©️ All rights reserved. | The Business TImes

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version