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posted by Fnord666 on Friday March 13 2020, @05:45PM   Printer-friendly
from the even-the-grim-reaper-fears-the-chihuahua dept.

Why do small dogs live longer than big dogs?:

Professor Elgar says the answer to the puzzle of canine lifespans can be found in data that charts "the schedule" of a species' rate of ageing.

This reflects the relationship between the age of an individual and how susceptible it is to dying. So while larger species typically live longer than smaller species, within a species smaller individuals could outlive larger individuals.

And this is particularly important when it come to dogs. A millennia of domestication and breeding means that dog breeds can vary in body size by up to 50 times.

Professor Elgar says that the research comparing size and age-related mortality in dogs shows that larger dogs die younger because they age significantly faster than smaller dogs.

A large study of 74 dog breeds in North America concluded "the driving force behind the trade-off between size and lifespan is apparently a strong positive relationship between size and ageing rate.

"We conclude that large dogs die young mainly because they age quickly."

Professor Elgar says that a larger dog, because of its size, may put more strain on its physiological processes, meaning they tend to wear out more quickly.

"Modern cars generally work well for eight or nine years, and then wear and tear sets in and they start falling apart. The speed with which they deteriorate varies between manufacturers. It's the same with dogs."

Dog morbidity rate is also impacted—as it is for humans—by lifestyle.

Just as young men aged 18 to 25 are more likely to die by misadventure, a working dog like a kelpie or sheepdog is more likely to die in an accident than a schnoodle whose only occupation is to look cute in its favourite chair.

Professor Elgar says the rule of thumb is that "the average lifespan for quite large dogs is about seven years, and 14 years for smaller dogs."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 15 2020, @03:25PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 15 2020, @03:25PM (#971573)

    Yeah, I can provide even better bullshit than the article:

    Maybe the smaller dogs have a higher reserve of stem cells for replacement because they don't use up as many to make a small body and because they're smaller they need fewer of them to repair stuff per year.

    There are other mechanisms that slow aging, but those mechanisms are in other species not dogs. Small and big dogs are the same species after all. The small dogs have similar aging and anti-aging mechanisms as the larger dogs, but they have more spare "bricks" to repair broken stuff AND they have smaller "walls" and "bridges" to repair (and in many cases the bridges have lower wear and tear).

    The exceptions of course are if the breed's defects are too bad. For example there are breeds that are so deformed that they can't breathe properly.

    See also: https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25458-blood-of-worlds-oldest-woman-hints-at-limits-of-life/ [newscientist.com] [newscientist.com]

    In van Andel-Schipper’s case, it seemed that in the twilight of her life, about two-thirds of the white blood cells remaining in her body at death originated from just two stem cells, implying that most or all of the blood stem cells she started life with had already burned out and died.