How Humans afford their superior Brains - The Expensive Tissue Hypothesis
The Expensive Tissue Hypothesis
Brain tissue is metabolically expensive, and anthropologists have been speculating about the outstanding fast development and the striking relative size of human brains for a long time. From a softball sized brain roughly 2 million years ago to what we have nowadays:
In relation to our body mass humans have the biggest brains!
So how could we afford this?
Basal metabolic turnover and Kleiber's law
As already stated in the beginning brain tissue is metabolically expensive, which means that it consumes a large amount of energy and, consequently, throws off an enormous amount of heat. The metabolic rate of brain tissue is nine times that of the average of the metabolic rate of the rest of the body. The following table shows the metabolic rates of various organs and their share in mass in an average human body.
Data taken from Ref. [1]
All this suggests that an organism with a pronounced brain simply needs to have a higher basal metabolic rate to cover the increased energy requirements due to the larger brain size. But there are constraints. It was already shown in 1932 by Max Kleiber, that the metabolic rate R for all organisms is proportional to the 3/4 power of the mass M of the organism.
Since the heat dissipation from an organism is proportional to its surface area, the metabolic rate can also be related to the surface of an organism, which will give also a very nice fit.
Due to the general physical and geometric principles upon which this law is based, it shows an impressive universality. Just have a look at the following graph:
Data taken from Ref. [1]
Now as we know about Kleiber's law, we know that there is a limitation for the metabolic rate and that humans are not just consuming way more energy to build and maintain their brains. Explanation: According to Kleiber's law, any animal species with roughly the same mass as a human, does also have roughly the same metabolic rate, but none of those do have such big brains as we do. Therefore it rises the question how do we pay for our larger brains?
The Expensive Tissue Hypothesis
At this point, the reader should recall again the first table: There it was shown that in terms of their relative metabolic rate the most expensive organs are the brain, the gastrointestinal tract, the liver, the kidneys and the heart.
In order to be able to afford a more pronounced brain compared to our humanoid relatives or other animals in general, humans must therefore make savings in one or all of the other expensive tissues. To shed light on this, Leslie C. Aiello and Peter Wheeler performed extensive investigations which revealed the following picture:
Data taken from Ref. [1]
Their research clearly showed, that the extended brain size was compensated by a significantly reduced GI tract size. It turned out that the GI tract of a 65 kg human is just little over half the size of the GI tract of a similar sized primate!
So now we do have an approach to find rational explanations of how human's unequalled encephalization was possible: According to Aiello and Wheeler, it was increased diet quality that allowed the gut to get smaller while still absorbing the necessary nutrients to fuel the metabolism. And how did our ancestors, the early hominoids, incresase the quality of their diets in comparison to our relatives, the primates?
To allow the gut to be smaller we need food, which is easy to digest, which delivers a lot of the nutrients that animals need to maintain their body and and these preferably in a form in which they are easily taken up. For example the essential iron uptake very much depends on the oxidation state of the iron:
Animal sources give Iron 2+, which is readily taken up.
Plant sources mainly give Iron 3+, which has a worse resorption.
So the fact that our ancestors started eating more and more meat, and even starting cooking it over fire and therefore outsourcing an energetically very costly first breakdown process, allowed them to evolve in the direction they did. Carbon-13 Isoptope Analysis starting with Australopithecus africanus and also performed on Homo confirmed the increasing consumption of meat the higher up the tree you go.
Main Conclusion
Using the here briefly summarized Expensive Tissue Hypothesis and the basic principles of Evolution Theory, we do not come to the conclusion that humans developed to be carnivores, but that we have developed because we started eating meat in the first place.
Nonetheless as already the the word "Hypothesis" implies, it is not necessarily true in all aspects. There was a lot of research work done, and very impressive, undeniable results were found, but in the end scientists working on Why- and How-questions concering historical biology are forced to establish a hypothesis, which has to fit the findings as well as possible and should be questioned for the sake of improving it.
Disclaimer
This article is not meant to attack vegetarian mentality and does also not imply in any form, that humans need a minimal meat uptake or anything like this. Our bodies are undenieable capable of processing animal products and in some aspects even in a better way than the herbal alternatives. The very fact that our digestive system is capable to process animal products and that an organism will always lose unnecessary abilities due to evolutionary pressure should speak for itself. - We are built as ominvores. - But you don't have to be one.
If you are interested to learn even more about this topic, there is a whole lot more of research results, hypotheses and rationalizations concerning the encephalization of humans. As a quick start I suggest to start with the References I stated at the very bottom.
And as always: If you have any particular question or encouragement, feel free to write them down in the comments. I will try to answer everyone.
For more scientific insights follow me!
Best,
moutain.phil28
References:
- Leslie C. Aiello and Peter Wheeler: The Expensive-Tissue Hypothesis,
Current Anthropology Vol. 36, No. 2 (Apr., 1995), pp. 199-221 - An Universe Review on the Kleiber's law
- A Signs of the Times - Article
This correlation between brain and gut evolution has outstanding implications! I am considering the relationship between the gut and emotions. The GI tract utilizes many of the same neurostrasmitters accociated with emotions such as Noradrenaline, Seratonin and acetylcholine. There is scientific validity when we say "gut feeling". In my experience other animals are far more sympathetic and use less logic than emotion to respond. The human need to put logic to everything and connect less with emotion could be a result of this evolutionary shift. This could also correlate with the increased consumption of meat. This act gives a logical advantage but is clearly less empathetic.
Thank you so much for your research and post I learned alot and am stimulated with so many new ideas.
I will be resteeming this as my first "subdaily scientific resteem"... Subdaily because I am currently backpacking in Columbia and I can't promise daily wifi ;)
I am very new to steem and could use support as I get going. But rather than asking for support I will give support. Sharing inspiring articles promotes a very promising growing community of thinkers and doers on steem. Thankyou for being one of the inspiring minds in this community!
Thanks for your interesting comment! It is indeed an legit and interesting connection! Will you do some research and provide us with a post about it!? This would be nice.
Best,
mountain.phil28
This sounds like it could be some great homework for tonight. I will see what I can do!
snap, what a fab title :D ha ha soo great :D ok my dear, i cant put 2 cents or in our world euro together right now.. Il beeee back>>>>>>>>
Nice work sweety😀👍🏻💗💗 well Done and new facts for me😜 not nitpicking just wish to point out, take a cow who eats Grass will Ofcourse have a biggee intestenal track do to diet i dont think its fare to compaire diffrent species who actually have diffrent food/life/ resons?? Secondly why dident Max compair THE differensen betwin humans instead? As we do know people have a Huge diffrence in IQ, ”streetsmarts” and diet( taking the diff betwin vegetarians and Meat esters) again great job 😀👍🏻 Just wish to debait it lol😉😜
It is the whole point of this work to show that the diet is a limiting factor to the development of extensive neuronal structures like the brain. Therefore it is necessary and only makes sense to compare different species.
Furthermore it is not reasonable to discus the intelligence difference between living individuals. (They are all of the same species and there you will only find short-term influence factors and statistic distribution.) This topic tackles evolutionary questions and prerequesits, therefore has to deal with "a greater view of the whole". You must preclude individual differences rising from various sources as much as possible, to be able to assign them to a distinct habit of an species which then (like here) drove their further evolution.
Therefore from my point of view, based on my scientific experience, it is not reasonable to compare vegetarians to meat eaters in terms of intelligence. The answer of this study will answer the wrong question. Because what you will get out of this study, will not answer, whether one of the diets favors higher intelligence, but rather which group ('less intelligent' vs. 'more intelligent') tend more to consume in a specific way.
The dietary habits discussed here will not show a difference if it is done by a single person over one lifetime. Evolution is a gradual and slow process and you are wrong if you believe it can be also observed in single individuals like in the timeframe of an whole species developing step by step.
The articel is spotless and your points to, ok? im not nagging in them ;) Im just trying to push it a bit longer.... If we/articel now state 'afford' bigger brain do to less digestive track? fare, cool, im IN and agree :D we know cows dont rule the world ha ha i just have a hard time seeing a cow ask-why? ;0 so il guess what i am saying is, compair species with simaler trades...? as from were i am standing, thats more fare :)
Hm need to part this a bit... 1> i dont think vegitarian have less intelligens then a meat eater.. i think/ belive it has to do with base , as in mom & dad, upbringing and so on, as in hooow many times they did get anwser on their -what & why's ;) AS we knooooow Substantia alba plus nuclei ,will grow/be better with more infuence/edjucation :) soo im actually wondering/questioning MORE, whyyy they dident do that research also? and add that :) as they are already on a great track :D
Naa me never said or meant, it can OR should be studied in 1 person... Im just saying, alll this data we now have looked at, we could have used to look at a long perspective, even in juust humans :)
It comes down to the fact that it is just a totally different question, needing no anthropologists but rather psychologists, neuroscientists,... to answer this question. This is why THEY didn't do this study.
I am sure someone did work on it. Right now I am not aware of an as extensive and qualitatively as good work as I presented - for a very much different topic.
But there might be one.
hm yes i KNOW<<points ^^ buuut they shouldent be..... ;0 Hm heay Mr noo dissing the anthropologists now, they can still play ;) LOL :P jupp, phsyc ya know, i am all game , wether that now is animals or wazz effer, its still a 'WHY' involved ;) Hun, i AM with you and noooot in any way shape or form question that BUT my point is, finding the results, i think they should gone OUTside their box ;) Hm i couldent find any :(
topic stands, i just wished they looked deeper, like pushed a bit longer.. I (secretly think/beeing hopeful, if you push
your brain, it will grow and that should be counted in (& no im not talking 1 person, im talking generations) )🐉🐲💗💗>>>>>
<<THIS is hm yumyum 🐉🐲💗
@mountain.phil28 ya upset, angry in the nose wizz me??? :( :(
No way, just don't get you crazy Dragon 😝
Have a good Night!
Best,
mountain.phil28
ok fare enuff. that was sad to hear. i might have been able to clear that up, if you hade asked.
Thank you, you to :)
thanks for giving very interesting information... about human brains.
Keep it up @mountain.phil28