Updated
Updated · NPR · Jun 20
Heliconius Butterflies Defy Aging for 6 Months, Holding Strength as Relatives Fade 25%
Updated
Updated · NPR · Jun 20

Heliconius Butterflies Defy Aging for 6 Months, Holding Strength as Relatives Fade 25%

3 articles · Updated · NPR · Jun 20

Summary

  • Heliconius butterflies can live up to six months and show no measurable age-related loss of strength, unlike shorter-lived relatives that pull about 25% less at life’s end.
  • Jessica Foley’s research found diet is only part of the story: even without pollen—the nutrient-rich food long thought to explain their longevity—Heliconius still outlived related butterflies.
  • Pollen still mattered for reproduction, with Heliconius able to keep laying eggs until late in life, reinforcing that they remain vigorous rather than merely surviving longer.
  • The work points to unidentified pro-longevity mechanisms, possibly involving conserved aging pathways such as DNA repair, that could help scientists study healthy aging beyond insects.

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