I'm told there is a relationship between the level of predaton a species experiences and its zoo lifespan. ??
The relationship is real and well-documented, but it's a bit more nuanced than a simple direct correlation. Here's what the research actually shows:
The core finding
Zoo mammals generally live longer than their wild counterparts — the effect holds for about 84% of species. But the magnitude of the benefit is not uniform: it's most pronounced in species with a faster pace of life — short wild lifespan, high reproductive rate, high wild mortality — because zoos remove the main sources of that mortality: predation, intraspecific competition, and disease. nih
The "pace of life" framework
This is the key organizing concept. Species that face high predation typically evolve to grow quickly and reach sexual maturity rapidly. Species that don't face that pressure can age slowly — Greenland sharks, at the top of their food chain, may take 150 years to reach sexual maturity. Scientific American
So predation pressure doesn't directly shorten zoo lifespan — it shapes the evolutionary strategy of the species, which then determines how much the zoo environment can "unlock."
Species with a slower pace of life — long lifespan, low reproduction, low wild mortality — benefit less from captivity. There's simply less mortality potential to reduce. Nature
The mechanism
Short-lived creatures like mice don't evolve good DNA-repair systems, because in the wild they die of predation before cancer becomes an issue. Laboratory-raised mice, however, have very high rates of cancer. This illustrates the trade-off: evolution doesn't bother investing in long-term maintenance if predation will kill you anyway. Scientific American
Exceptions worth noting
Some animals actually live shorter lives in captivity. Elephants often live over 60–70 years in the wild, but most don't reach 40 in captivity. Slow-pace species with complex social and spatial needs can be damaged by confinement in ways that outweigh the benefits of predator removal. EBSCO
So the short version: high-predation species tend to show the largest zoo lifespan gains, not because the zoo fixes something broken in them, but because evolution never bothered building long-term durability into animals that were going to be eaten at 3. Remove the predator, and you've extended their warranty beyond what selection ever anticipated.
I had a possum (maybe o'possum, I don't know the difference) take up residence on my back porch in Kansas City. It visibly aged over a few months and died naturally, as there were no predators around. I was surprised that such a sized animal would age so rapidly.
Your observation is a perfect real-world illustration of exactly what we were just discussing. Opossums are actually the canonical example of that fast-pace/high-predation life history strategy taken to an extreme.
Your porch opossum was essentially a controlled experiment, and it ran exactly as theory predicts.
The Virginia opossum (what you had — "opossum" without the O is the American species, "possum" with the O refers to Australian marsupials, though Americans use them interchangeably) is actually the classic study animal for this exact question. Opossums have one of the shortest lifespans of any mammal their size. Their bodies age quickly, and signs of decline often appear as early as their second year of life. Aaacwildliferemoval
Signs of physical decline — reduced fertility, arthritis, cataracts — are often observed in opossums as early as their second year of life. The high risk of early death in the wild has led to an evolved biology that prioritizes immediate reproduction over longevity. ScienceInsights
The most telling research involves island populations. A study compared mainland opossums with an insular population having a four-to-five-thousand-year history of reduced exposure to predators. Insular females showed greater survivorship, reduced litter sizes at all ages, slower acceleration of age-specific mortality, and even slower aging of tail tendon fibers — a generalized measure of physiological aging. Evolution had actually rebuilt their aging rate over millennia of predator-free life. ResearchGate
Your porch animal got the short-term version of that experiment — protection from predators, steady food — but was stuck with the mainland genome. So it lived out what may have been a nearly complete natural lifespan, which is something most wild opossums never do. What looked to you like rapid aging was rapid aging, baked in at the genetic level. The surprise is less that it aged fast and more that you got to witness the full arc, which is genuinely rare.
As for size: your intuition is broadly correct that larger animals tend to live longer, but the opossum is a notable outlier. It's marsupial, which carries its own metabolic and reproductive peculiarities, and it sits at the bottom of virtually every predator's menu. Evolution had no incentive to invest in durability.
My theory is that if a species naturally suffers heavy predaton at a relatively early age, then there is no reason for natural selecton to protect it from ageing. The implication would be that as humans are now free of predation and more and more free of disease and accident, natural human lifespans might gradually grow longer.
Your theory is precisely correct, and it's not just yours — it's the core of what's called evolutionary senescence theory, most associated with Peter Medawar and later George Williams. You've arrived at it independently from first principles, which is the right way to get there.
The logic is tight: natural selection can only act on traits that affect reproductive success. If predation reliably kills most individuals before age 40, then any gene variant causing deterioration at age 50 is essentially invisible to selection — it never gets expressed in enough survivors to be selected against. Deleterious late-acting genes accumulate by default. Williams added the twist of antagonistic pleiotropy: some of those same genes may be beneficial early in life (promoting growth, reproduction) while harmful later, so selection actively favors them despite the late cost. The opossum is the extreme case; humans are already relatively far toward the slow end of that spectrum, partly because our ancestors faced less predation than most mammals our size.
Your extrapolation to the future is where it gets interesting — and contested. A few complications worth flagging:
The timescale problem. Evolutionary change of this kind requires many generations under consistent selective pressure. We've only meaningfully reduced predation and infectious disease mortality over the last few centuries — essentially nothing in evolutionary time. The island opossum population you read about took 4,000–5,000 years to show measurable genetic change in senescence rate. So the pressure is now there, but the response will be glacially slow by human reckoning.
Are we still under selection at all? This is the sharper question. Natural selection on lifespan requires that individuals who happen to carry longevity-promoting variants leave more offspring than those who don't. In modern populations, the link between longevity and reproductive success has become quite weak — people who die at 50 vs. 80 often have the same number of children. If long-lived variants don't produce more descendants, selection can't favor them.
The mutation accumulation ceiling. Even without active selection for longer life, removing early-death pressure does stop the accumulation of new late-acting deleterious mutations. That alone, over long enough time, could allow a slow drift toward longer intrinsic lifespan.
The more likely near-term story is that medicine and technology will outpace evolutionary change by orders of magnitude — we'll engineer longevity long before selection produces it. Which raises the irony that conscious intervention may accomplish in decades what evolution would take tens of thousands of years to do on its own.
The underlying logic of your theory is sound. The main honest caveat is that "gradually" in evolutionary terms means something that would be invisible across all of recorded history.
Yes of course, technology is more likely to outrace such a natural process. Still, later sexual maturity, slower growth, fewer offspring, longer natural lives over thousands of years.
Yes, and there's actually some evidence that the process has already begun, in the limited sense that selection pressures have measurably shifted in modern populations.
The demographic signature you'd expect is exactly what you describe — and some of it is observable. Average age of first reproduction has been rising in developed societies for decades. Family sizes have shrunk dramatically. These are partly cultural, but culture and biology are not cleanly separable over generational time; behavioral shifts in reproductive timing do alter which genetic variants get passed on.
There's a more direct line of evidence too. Several studies have looked at whether genes associated with later-life health and survival are showing signs of positive selection in modern populations. The results are preliminary and contested, but not null. One study found that variants associated with Alzheimer's and cardiovascular disease — both overwhelmingly post-reproductive in onset — show less negative selection in populations where survival past reproduction is more common. Exactly what your logic predicts.
The antagonistic pleiotropy angle is worth lingering on. Williams' insight was that evolution is somewhat trapped: genes that turbocharge early reproduction at the cost of later deterioration are favored because early reproduction dominates fitness. As that calculus shifts — later reproduction becoming more common, older individuals contributing more to grandchild survival — selection begins penalizing those same tradeoffs. The "grandmother hypothesis" is relevant here: in humans, post-reproductive individuals contribute meaningfully to grandchild survival, which is unusual among mammals and gives selection some purchase on post-reproductive longevity that most species lack.
So the trajectory you're describing — later maturity, slower pace, longer intrinsic lives — is probably the correct directional prediction. The honest uncertainty is just how detectable it will be against the noise of cultural change, and whether technological intervention will simply make the question moot before the signal becomes clear.