Women consistently outlive men in nearly every part of the world, and scientists now believe the explanation may be deeply rooted in biology and evolution rather than lifestyle alone.
A recent international study led by researchers at Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology examined lifespan data from more than 1,100 species of mammals and birds. The findings suggest that differences in lifespan between males and females may be shaped by millions of years of evolutionary development.
Researchers analyzed records from zoos worldwide and discovered that female mammals lived longer than males in the majority of species studied. In birds, however, the trend was often reversed, with males typically living longer than females.
The Role of Chromosomes
Scientists say part of the explanation may lie in sex chromosomes. In mammals, females carry two X chromosomes, while males carry one X and one Y chromosome.
Researchers believe having two X chromosomes may provide females with added protection against harmful genetic mutations, potentially contributing to longer lifespans. In birds, the chromosome arrangement differs, and females are the sex with mixed chromosomes, which may help explain why males often live longer in many bird species.
However, experts note that chromosomes alone do not fully explain lifespan differences across all species.
Mating Competition May Affect Lifespan
The study also found that mating behavior plays a significant role in survival rates. In species where males aggressively compete for mates such as gorillas, baboons, and elephant seals males were more likely to have shorter lifespans.
Researchers suggest that the energy spent on physical competition, larger body size, and dominance behaviors may increase stress on the body and raise the risk of injury or early death.
Species with less competition between mates, particularly monogamous species, tended to show smaller differences in lifespan.
Parenthood and Longevity
Parental care also appears to influence lifespan. Scientists observed that the sex responsible for most caregiving often lived longer, especially in species where offspring require long-term care.
In mammals, females typically invest more time in raising young, and researchers believe evolution may favor longer female lifespans to improve offspring survival.
According to the study, this biological pattern may help explain why women and female mammals often show greater longevity overall.
Evidence Beyond Environment
To better understand whether environmental factors were responsible for lifespan differences, researchers compared animals living in zoos with those in the wild. Even in protected environments with fewer predators, diseases, and food shortages, the lifespan gap between males and females remained noticeable.
Experts say this suggests that while healthcare, nutrition, and living conditions influence longevity, underlying biological and evolutionary factors still play a major role.
What the Findings Suggest
Scientists believe the research highlights how deeply lifespan differences may be connected to evolutionary history. Factors such as genetics, reproduction, competition, and caregiving appear to have shaped survival patterns across species over millions of years.
While modern medicine and healthier lifestyles continue to improve life expectancy worldwide, researchers suggest that the biological gap between men and women may never disappear completely because it is influenced by long-standing evolutionary forces.




