Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.
Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, LA 70808.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Nov 26;121(48):e2409674121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2409674121. Epub 2024 Nov 18.
All organisms use limited energy to grow, survive, and reproduce, necessitating energy allocation tradeoffs, but there is debate over how selection impacted metabolic budgets and tradeoffs in primates, including humans. Here, we develop a method to compare metabolic rates as quotients of observed relative to expected values for mammals corrected for size, body composition, environmental temperature, and phylogenetic relatedness. Contrary to previous analyses, these quotients reveal that nonhuman primates have total metabolic rates expected for similar-sized mammals in similar environments. In addition, data from several small-scale societies show that humans evolved exceptionally high resting, activity, and total metabolic rates apparently by overcoming tradeoffs between resting and active energy expenditures that constrain other primates. Enhanced metabolic rates help humans fuel expanded brains, faster reproductive rates, extended longevity, and high percentage of body fat.
所有生物都需要利用有限的能量来生长、生存和繁殖,这就需要在能量分配上做出权衡取舍,但关于选择是如何影响灵长类动物(包括人类)的代谢预算和权衡取舍,目前仍存在争议。在这里,我们开发了一种方法,用于比较代谢率,即将哺乳动物的观测值与预期值进行比较,同时对大小、身体成分、环境温度和系统发育亲缘关系进行了校正。与之前的分析结果相反,这些比率表明,非人类灵长类动物的总代谢率与在类似环境下相似大小的哺乳动物的预期值相当。此外,来自几个小规模社会的数据表明,人类通过克服限制其他灵长类动物的静息和活动能量消耗之间权衡取舍,进化出了异常高的静息、活动和总代谢率。增强的代谢率有助于人类为扩展的大脑、更快的繁殖率、更长的寿命和更高的体脂百分比提供燃料。