Jump to content
Banner by ~ Sparklefan1234

Do we really live longer than other mammals?


Ando333

Recommended Posts

Do other mammals really live that less than the human or is it just because we know how to care more about ourselves and don't really care about investing as much for other species's health and a longer life?


Horses for instance apparently have a lifespan of 25-30 years, almost the same as the human in most of its history. We now can easily get to 80~ thank to technology. Is it really all only thank to technology? or the human actually lived more than 30 years in the past and I'm being fooled by a missconception?


Why even with today's treatment horses still live 25-30 years? or they actually live more now than before just like us?


Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some race horses are worth millions of dollars. They would absolutely be taken great care of even after getting too old to race, because they can still be used for breeding. But they still wouldn't live much longer than three decades.

 

Some critically endangered animals in captivity are given the best care in the world in order to preserve their species. But they still don't outlive people. Some creatures do just have different life spans.

  • Brohoof 3

 

Signature_Forums.png.dd2a654d7faa42c09ea06c44865a3c2a.png

Check out my artwork any time: http://shadobabe.deviantart.com/
"OMG; You are such a troll. XD" - PathfinderCS

Link to comment
Share on other sites

According to Wikipedia, the record longest-living non-human mammal was an Asian elephant who lived to the age of 86. These elephants normally only live to 50 and the longest life expectancy is normally 70.

 

The oldest horse on record supposedly lived to 62.

 

The oldest mammal that is closest to humans was an orangutan that lived to age 55.

 

Tortoises, however, blow us out of the water on a regular basis. The oldest was believed to have been over 250.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_longest-living_organisms


 

 

Horses for instance apparently have a lifespan of 25-30 years, almost the same as the human in most of its history. We now can easily get to 80~ thank to technology. Is it really all only thank to technology? or the human actually lived more than 30 years in the past and I'm being fooled by a missconception?

 

While the average life expectancy through most of history was around 30, this is because of an enormous (by modern standards) child mortality rate. If you eliminate the deaths of those under the age of five, life expectancy got much closer to around 60.

  • Brohoof 1

RedCedarForumSignature.png
Roleplaying OC: Red Cedar - Cast Character: Applejack
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tortoises can easily outlive humans and those that are pets have been known to be passed down from one owner to the next as a result of their longevity. Most mammals sadly don't live as long as humans though some have come close due to unusual circumstances that enabled it to happen.


rainbowfalls_sig.png.9f23ec82e216af1315704914cd3052b1.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Technology and human advancement does play a big role for us at least, because life expectancy in the 1200's for example was around 35, due to lack of medical care and other problems. Nowadays, the human race seems to reach much higher numbers which could be a sign that humans could always live that long, but simply didn't reach it most of the time because of outside influences.

  • Brohoof 1

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some mammals, such as elephants, can live as long as humans. But on the whole, we benefit from improved medical care (as Kyoshi mentioned) and a lack of natural predators (aside from each other, I guess). Bear in mind, too, that humans have the longest developmental period of any mammal. I reckon it's a contributing factor to our longer natural lifespans and our general ability to collaborate as a species in complex ways.


pete-alonso1.jpg.f27295daeb2f61a9d83493a73c62079d.jpg

Domine, tu omnia nosti, tu scis quia amo te.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For the most part, yes...I think the oldest living person is currently 112 years old.. Though, like said above, some animals such as tortoises do tend to outlive the average human life span. I'm sure with the advancement of animal feed/pet food, we've also extended the life expectancy of most animals that have been domesticated to some extent.


Fluttershy's lover, she's my waifu. I'm in love and obsessed with her, she's given me shyabetes. *Hnnnng*

Keep3555Calmsig600x100HOBOFont_zpsd659ba 

Yellow Pink Squee Blogs | Ask one of Fluttershy's biggest fans | Official Fluttershy fanclub page

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm pretty sure humans live the longest on average, cause of technology and medicine advancing, there's been a drastic change over the past centuries in average lifelength of a human, and it'll most likely keep getting longer.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The interesting truth to this question is that we really don't know ... at least not completely. We know that some mammals will enter a net loss of cellular reproduction at different times, so there is some form of built in expiration date. There is some correlation between metabolism and heart rate, and when cells start dying at a greater rate that they are being created. It isn't all 'environmental' either. While humans have greatly extended their lifespans, we cannot seem to do the same for animals under controlled care, at least not to the extent we experienced. This is at least a little surprising considering proven concepts like elasticity.

 

That said, humans seem to have a higher rate of cellular respiration that lasts longer than most mammals. It also isn't limited to end of life. There is also a huge difference in growth hormones. Dogs gain adult teeth at nine weeks ... and can bear young at a year old.

 

At no time in homo sapien​'s history could we have reached reproductive maturity at that age. It is another piece of the puzzle that suggest that some mammals simply have a longer life span, and the entire life cycle is impacted.


 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Because humans have a real hardon for fighting wars, the average lifespan for men were like 30 for a loong time. If we hadn't been fighting constantly for millennia(and still are in some areas of the world) that average would be a lot higher.

 

Compared to the lifespan of a horse, a human have on average, 2.5x theirs. This is due to technologies such as vaccines, much bigger increase in personal hygiene, and a dramatic decrease in death rates due to everything from accidents to illnesses and diseases. There are other factors also coming into play, but those are some of the biggest ones.

Edited by Autism is Cute AF

“Discovery is dangerous . . . but so is life. A man unwilling to take risk is doomed never to learn, never to grow, never to live.” - House Harkonnen

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's because reptiles don't generate oxidizing body heat, mammals probably then also have a higher rate of cancer.


All things that interact with the world exert a force. All things that exert a force have an opposite and equal force. Ergo, nothing immaterial exists [because where would the opposite force be without material as a medium?]. Ergo god doesn't exist immaterially. Also if the universe were infinite itd take infinite time for a god to make it. If it were finite it'd be subject to entropy. Which means an eternal god can't exist.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

As you said, the original human lifespan was only around 30 years. Now we have people breaking 100 fairly often, and others are researching how to live forever and estimate a breakthrough by 2040. 

I personally think you shouldn't mess with nature too much. If we find a way to live forever, nature is going to find a way to break it.



5F6F8DC5-9AD9-4CAA-8583-26C26D84F16C.gif.e19a798194ad73508ccbdca1dfa04e58.gif

And that’s the bottom line, ‘cause Stone Cold said so!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

Recent studies have found that harpoon heads from 1890 have been found in the bodies of recently killed Bowhead Whales, and now their life expectancy has been placed to be somewhere over 200 years, but it's hard for us to figure out exactly what their life expectancy is due to them living in the ocean and that no one has been studying them for long enough.

On 2017-3-9 at 3:28 PM, Fluttershutter said:

Whales may live longer. No one's kept track long enough.

Well we know Bowheads live past 200 now, so we've got that info.


  "I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by."


- Douglass Adams​​

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Aren't blue whales mammals and capable of living a pretty long time :P ? Like 90-100+ years :wacko: . I guess we outlive a lot of mammals but not always :wacko: .


img-18807-1-EVnkzff.png

Sig by Wolf, Handwriting by SparklingSwirls

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On average, human females live for 83 years. Males live for 76 years.

There are few animals in general that have a longer lifespan than us. And keep in mind: Our average lifespan have pretty much increased by 60%-100% since 0 AD. The average lifespan at that time were around 35-40 years if I remember correctly.


“Discovery is dangerous . . . but so is life. A man unwilling to take risk is doomed never to learn, never to grow, never to live.” - House Harkonnen

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Humanity has access to resources other mammals do not, such as science and technology. I think that if you took these from us, we'd die decades earlier due to diseases and other natural causes.

Keep in mind that during the Stone age you'd probably be lucky to reach the ripe old age of 20.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I read somewhere a theory why we live longer.

The heart has a surtan beats in your live. Since we grown and don't have to hunt anymore, our heartbeat are stronger and slower and that's why we live longer. Tortoises live longer because their heart is so slow as their body's. I don't know if it is true, but I've red it somewhere. :orly:


If I don't understand something or Interpret it wrong, I'm dutch. Sometimes I gamble for meanings of the words. And sometimes I write the wrong words, like week and weak for example. Sorry for it already. :smug:

Discord, Twilight, Sunset, Fluttershy, Starlight, Rarity, Luna, Celestia, Big MCintosh, Cadence, Shining, Minuette, Lyra, Rara, Sweetie Belle, Cheerilee, Derpy, Spike.

!Feel Free To Talk And Walk Where Ever You Like On This Forum!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Whales do lived much longer than we do, up 117-245 yrs.


                 

ezgif-3-2022f43b7e48.gif.cc21d01322ba58d07570880d654a323e.gif.329d04ca2e8802045b40325a74a30f1d.gif

♪ "I practice every day to find some clever lines to say, to make the meaning come through"♪
 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Join the herd!

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...