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Burnt out birds suggest hard work could be bad for your health

Date:
September 2, 2014
Source:
British Ecological Society (BES)
Summary:
Unequal sharing of workloads in societies could leave the most industrious individuals at higher risk of poor health and prone to accelerated ageing, according to a new study of a cooperative bird in the Kalahari Desert.
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Unequal sharing of workloads in societies could leave the most industrious individuals at higher risk of poor health and prone to accelerated aging, according to a new study of a cooperative bird in the Kalahari Desert.

A team of scientists at the University of Exeter studied white-browed sparrow weavers, a social species in which all group members share offspring care duties, but the dominant male and female work hardest.

Dominants are the only birds that breed, with dominant males singing to attract a mate and dominant females producing all of the eggs and providing most of the care for nestlings. Both dominants also invest most in fiercely defending the group's territory.

In order to assess how these unequal workloads impact the health of the birds, the researchers measured the level of antioxidant protection in 93 sparrow weavers before and then again after a long breeding season.

Antioxidant defences help animals protect themselves against the damaging effects of free radicals, but if hard work overwhelms this protection it can result in oxidative stress -- implicated in a range of diseases and aging.

Lead author Dr Dominic Cram said: "When groups of animals live together, including humans, they often divide workloads, and some individuals work harder than others. We wanted to investigate whether the hardest working members are the healthiest, and whether this allows them to work harder than everyone else. We also wanted to know whether work rates impact health, leaving the hardest workers in poor condition."

The study found that, while dominants and subordinates had comparable levels of antioxidant protection before the breeding season, once the intensive six-month breeding period had passed, the hardest working dominant females were suffering from weakened antioxidant protection.

Co-author Dr Andrew Young of the Centre for Ecology and Conservation at the University of Exeter added: "Our findings suggest that the unequal sharing of workloads in animal societies may leave the hardest-working individuals at risk of oxidative stress, which could lead to poor health and accelerated aging."

The findings, published in the journal Functional Ecology, are among the first of their kind for social vertebrates and suggest that social dominance in such species may entail hidden physiological costs, with implications for the patterns of health and aging in societies.


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Materials provided by British Ecological Society (BES). Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Dominic L. Cram, Jonathan D. Blount, Andrew J. Young. Oxidative status and social dominance in a wild cooperative breeder. Functional Ecology, 2014; DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.12317

Cite This Page:

British Ecological Society (BES). "Burnt out birds suggest hard work could be bad for your health." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 2 September 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140902205226.htm>.
British Ecological Society (BES). (2014, September 2). Burnt out birds suggest hard work could be bad for your health. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 28, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140902205226.htm
British Ecological Society (BES). "Burnt out birds suggest hard work could be bad for your health." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140902205226.htm (accessed December 28, 2024).

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