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Birds appear to reach sexual maturity between four and six years of age; this is the age range of breeding recorded in captivity.
The oldest member of the species recorded in captivity was over 20 years of age, and a wild bird has been picked up 16 years and 4 months after being banded.
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We tested for homoscedasticity of variance between vocalizations recorded in the wild and in captivity, in the five spectral variables, using a Brown-Forsythe test.
The longevity record in captivity is seven years.
We only considered studies conducted in the wild or in captivity where, based on the information provided by the authors, it could be assumed species were not recorded in mixed-species groups.
The maximum recorded life span in captivity is over 54 years.
We built a comprehensive, annotated transcript catalogue for N. furzeri, the vertebrate species with the shortest lifespan recorded for vertebrates in captivity, and identified 85 genes showing significantly changed transcript levels over the N. furzeri lifetime.
The Sumatran rhino lives an estimated 30 45 years in the wild, while the record time in captivity is a female D. lasiotis which lived for 32 years and 8 months before dying in the London Zoo in 1900.
One of these, a female named "Begum", was captured in Chittagong in 1868 and survived at the London Zoo until 1900, the record lifetime in captivity for a Sumatran rhino.
Three cubs have been spotted in the pack -- the first recorded births outside captivity within the current borders of Germany since about 1850.
The northern bald ibis lives for an average of 20 to 25 years in captivity (oldest recorded male 37 years, oldest recorded female 30 years).
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