The Journal of General Physiology
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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 5, 205-214, Copyright © 1922 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

THE EQUIVALENCE OF AGE IN ANIMALS

Samuel Brody 1 and Arthur C. Ragsdale 1

1 From the College of Agriculture and Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Missouri, Columbia.

1. A method of plotting growth curves is presented which is considered more useful than the usual method in bringing out a number of important phenomena such as the equivalence of age in different animals, difference in the shape and duration of corresponding growth cycles in different animals, and also in determinating the age of maxima without resorting to complicated mathematical computations.

2. It is suggested that after the third cycle is past the conceptional age of the maximum of the third cycle may be taken as the age of reference for estimating the equivalent physiological ages in different animals. Before the age of the third cycle, the maxima of the second and first cycles are most conveniently used as points of reference.

3. It is shown that the product of the conceptional age of the maximum of the third cycle by 13, gives a value which is, with the possible exception of man, very near to the normal duration of life of animals under the most favorable conditions of life. In other words, the equivalent physiological ages in different animals bear an approximately constant linear relation to the duration of their growth periods.

4. Attention is called to certain differences in the shape and duration of the corresponding growth cycles in different animals and of the effect of sex on these cycles.

Submitted on June 20, 1922


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