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肥胖与聪慧:哺乳动物中脂肪与大脑权衡的比较分析

Being fat and smart: A comparative analysis of the fat-brain trade-off in mammals.

作者信息

Heldstab Sandra A, van Schaik Carel P, Isler Karin

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zurich, Switzerland.

出版信息

J Hum Evol. 2016 Nov;100:25-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2016.09.001.

Abstract

Humans stand out among non-aquatic mammals by having both an extremely large brain and a relatively large amount of body fat. To understand the evolution of this human peculiarity we report a phylogenetic comparative study of 120 mammalian species, including 30 primates, using seasonal variation in adult body mass as a proxy of the tendency to store fat. Species that rely on storing fat to survive lean periods are expected to be less active because of higher costs of locomotion and have increased predation risk due to reduced agility. Because a fat-storage strategy reduces the net cognitive benefit of a large brain without reducing its cost, such species should be less likely to evolve a larger brain than non-fat-storing species. We therefore predict that the two strategies to buffer food shortages (storing body fat and cognitive flexibility) are compensatory, and therefore predict negative co-evolution between relative brain size and seasonal variation in body mass. This trade-off is expected to be stronger in predominantly arboreal species than in more terrestrial ones, as the cost of transporting additional adipose depots is higher for climbing than for horizontal locomotion. We did, indeed, find a significant negative correlation between brain size and coefficient of variation (CV) in body mass in both sexes for the subsample of arboreal species, both in all mammals and within primates. In predominantly terrestrial species, in contrast, this correlation was not significant. We therefore suggest that the adoption of habitually terrestrial locomotor habits, accompanied by a reduced reliance on climbing, has allowed for a primate of our body size the unique human combination of unusually large brains and unusually large adipose depots.

摘要

人类在非水生哺乳动物中脱颖而出,拥有极其庞大的大脑和相对较多的体脂。为了理解这种人类特性的进化,我们报告了一项对120种哺乳动物(包括30种灵长类动物)的系统发育比较研究,使用成年体重的季节性变化作为储存脂肪倾向的指标。由于运动成本较高,依赖储存脂肪来度过食物匮乏期的物种预计活动较少,并且由于敏捷性降低而增加被捕食的风险。因为脂肪储存策略在不降低大脑成本的情况下降低了大脑的净认知益处,所以这类物种比不储存脂肪的物种进化出更大脑的可能性应该更小。因此,我们预测缓冲食物短缺的两种策略(储存体脂和认知灵活性)是相互补偿的,因此预测相对脑容量与体重季节性变化之间存在负协同进化。预计这种权衡在主要树栖的物种中比在更多地生活在陆地上的物种中更强,因为攀爬时运输额外脂肪储备的成本高于水平移动。事实上,在所有哺乳动物以及灵长类动物中的树栖物种子样本中,我们确实发现大脑大小与两性体重变异系数(CV)之间存在显著的负相关。相比之下,在主要生活在陆地上的物种中,这种相关性并不显著。因此,我们认为,习惯性地采用陆地运动习性,并减少对攀爬的依赖,使得我们这种体型的灵长类动物能够拥有独特的人类特征组合,即异常庞大的大脑和异常庞大的脂肪储备。

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