No need to shrink guts to have a larger brain
19 Nov. ScienceDaily
The so-called expensive-tissue hypothesis, which suggests a trade-off
between the size of the brain and the size of the digestive tract, has
been challenged by researchers at the University of Zurich. They have
shown that brains in mammals have grown over the course of evolution
without the digestive organs having to become smaller. The researchers
have further demonstrated that the potential to store fat often goes
hand in hand with relatively small brains — except in humans, who owe
their increased energy intake and correspondingly large brain to
communal child care, better diet and their ability to walk upright.
Brain tissue is a major consumer of energy in the body. If an animal
species evolves a larger brain than its ancestors, the increased need
for energy can be met by either obtaining additional sources of food or
by a trade-off with other functions in the body. In humans, the brain is
three times larger and thus requires a lot more energy than that of our
closest relatives, the great apes. Until now, the generally accepted
theory for this condition was that early humans were able to redirect
energy to their brains thanks to a reduced digestive tract. Zurich
primatologists, however, have now disproved this theory, demonstrating
that mammals with relatively large brains actually tend to have a
somewhat bigger digestive tract. Ana Navarrete, the first author on the
study recently published in Nature, has studied hundreds of carcasses
from zoos and museums.
“The data set contains a hundred species, from the stag to the
shrew,” explains the PhD student. The scientists involved in the study
then compared the size of the brain with the fat-free body mass. Senior
author Karin Isler stresses that, “it is extremely important to take an
animal’s adipose deposits into consideration as, in some species, these
constitute up to half of the body mass in autumn.” But even compared
with fat-free body mass, the size of the brain does not correlate
negatively with the mass of other organs. More fat, smaller brain
Nevertheless, the storage of fat plays a key role in brain size
evolution.
The researchers discovered another rather surprising correlation: the
more fat an animal species can store, the smaller its brain. Although
adipose tissue itself does not use much energy, fat animals need a lot
of energy to carry extra weight, especially when climbing or running.
This energy is then lacking for potential brain expansion. “It seems
that large adipose deposits often come at the expense of mental
flexibility,” says Karin Isler. “We humans are an exception, along with
whales and seals — probably because, like swimming, our bipedalism
doesn’t require much more energy even when we are a bit heavier.”
Interplay of energetic factors The rapid increase in brain size and the
associated increase in energy intake began about two million years ago
in the genus Homo. Based on their extensive studies of animals, the
Zurich researchers propose a scenario in which several energetic factors
are involved: “In order to stabilize the brain’s energy supply on a
higher level, prehistoric man needed an all-year, high-quality source of
food, such as underground tubers or meat.
As they no longer climbed every day, they perfected the art of
walking upright. Even more important, however, is communal child care,”
says Karin Isler. Because ape mothers do not receive any help, they can
only raise an offspring every five to eight years. Thanks to communal
care for mothers and children, humans can afford both: a huge brain and
more frequent offspring.
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