Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 August 2010
INTRODUCTION
It seems that until the 1920s the only species for which there was a complete life table was our own (Pearl, 1928). However, in 1921, in the first of a long series of papers with the general title “Experimental Studies on the Duration of Life”, Pearl and Parker remedied this situation by providing a complete life table for a second species. This species was an insect, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Raymond Pearl seems to have had few reservations about using an insect as a model for the study of human ageing and longevity; frequently he presented the survival curves for Drosophila and man on a single graph to show how similar they are. Subsequently many other workers have studied insect ageing and longevity, and have pointed out the relevance of their studies to ageing in man. Of course, it would be foolish to argue that insects can be an entirely adequate model for the study of human ageing, or even that they can be used for testing all theories of ageing. Quite clearly, they are of little value for testing theories of ageing which, for example, give a primary role to the immune system, or to the neuroendocrine system. However, many theories of ageing should be applicable to all species that show age-dependent deteriorative changes, since they suggest that senescence is the result of timedependent changes in the cells and molecules which make up all multicellular organisms. For testing these theories, insects should be at least as suitable as any other organism.
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