December 14, 2016 by Bob
Yirka report
(Phys.org)—A team of researchers
working on the Scottish Isle of Rum has found evidence of larger brains in
female red deer conferring longer lifespans and more offspring raised to
adulthood. In their paper published in the journal Royal Society Open
Science, the researchers describe their study and what they found.
A lot of research has been done
comparing brain
size between
species, but there are few comparisons of brain size between individuals of the
same species or group. In this new effort, the researchers sought
to learn more about what it means for a mammal to have a larger brain than
others in its group. They focused on red deer living on the Isle of Rum
because other researchers have been tracking them for approximately 40 years—a
time span that has covered seven generations. The researchers were able to
measure brain size by measuring the skulls of 1,314 deer that had died.
Surprisingly, the team found a 63
percent variation among the deer on the island. They also found that females
with larger brains tended to live longer and produced more offspring that for
unknown reasons managed to live to become adults themselves. Females also
passed on the trait to their offspring. Perhaps even more surprising was that
the team found no discernible differences between males with brains of
different sizes. The team also reports that they were unable to find any
downside to larger brains in deer of either gender. Theories have suggested
large-brained individuals might have weaker immune systems or fewer offspring
due to the higher energy demands of larger brains—but that did not seem to be
the case with the deer.
The researchers suggest physical
strength and agility might be the overriding factor leading to male success as
a possible explanation for why larger brain size did not confer
positive attributes. Larger brains in the females, on the other hand, might
have made them smarter in the sense that they were better able to find new food
sources when old ones dried up or when dealing with other stressful situations.
On the other hand, they note, it might be the case that it was simply
coincidence—the researchers cannot say for sure.
The study was the first of its
kind, which suggests that other studies need to be done with other species to
learn more about why some individuals have larger brains and what it means for
them.
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