If you want to know the secret to a longer life, look to reptiles. But you may not like the answer you find.

There is a belief that a fast-paced lifestyle is damaging to health. Slowing down will not just be more relaxing, but also keep you around, finds an analysis of 1,014 species of reptiles (including 672 lizards and 336 snakes), a representative sample of the approximately 10,000 known reptiles on the planet. After examining their life history parameters, such as body size, earliest age at first reproduction, body temperature, reproductive modes, litter or clutch size and frequency, geographic distribution, and diet, they found that early sexual maturation and a higher frequency of laying eggs or giving birth were associated with shortened longevity. 

Oh, and a plant-rich diet. So you will be around longer, but a lot less happy. 


Who's laughing now, sexed up carnivore? Credit: wall.net

"There were aspects of this study that we were able to anticipate," said Prof. Meiri. "Reproduction, for example, comes at the price of great stress to the mother. She experience physiological stress, is unable to forage efficiently, and is more vulnerable to her surroundings. This reflects evolutionary logic. To relate this to humans, imagine the physical stress the body of an Olympic gymnast experiences -- and the first thing that disappears is her period. In reptiles, it also increases the probability of being preyed upon.

"We found that reptiles that were sexually mature early on were less likely to make it to old age. Live fast and die young, they say -- but live slow, live long."

The team also found that herbivores -- lizards with a plant-rich diet -- lived longer than similar-sized carnivores that ate mostly insects. Ingestion of a protein-rich diet seemed to lead to faster growth, earlier and more intense reproduction, and a shortened lifespan. Herbivorous reptiles were thought to consume nutritionally poorer food, so they reached maturity later and therefore lived longer. 

Hunting may also be riskier than gathering fruits and leaves - at least for animals, the researchers concluded. "If you're an animal, hunting your food can be dangerous," said Meiri. "You risk injury or even death. This is why you cannot simply transfer this logic to humans. Going to buy a head of lettuce at the supermarket is just as risky as going to the meat department. As a reptile, if you eat plants, you may need to be frugal, take life more slowly, and save your calories for digestion. You are forced to have a slower life, a more phlegmatic existence."

The researchers also found correlates that suggested reptiles in geographically colder regions lived longer - probably due to two factors: hibernation, which offers respite from predators, and slower movement due to a seasonal drop in metabolic rate. "Our main predictors of longevity were herbivorous diets, colder climates, larger body sizes, and infrequent and later reproduction," said Prof. Meiri. "I stress that you cannot simply transfer the results of a study on lizards to humans -- but this is the first study of its kind on reptiles, which does open up an avenue for further research on other factors that lead to longevity of these and other species."

 Published in Global Ecology and Biogeography. Source: American Friends of Tel Aviv University