• Re: Brain body size evolution

    From Athel Cornish-Bowden@21:1/5 to RonO on Tue Jul 16 16:49:18 2024
    On 2024-07-16 12:40:13 +0000, RonO said:

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/07/240708101004.htm

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-024-02451-3

    The Nature article is open access.

    The authors claim that they have developed a model for the relationship between brain and body weight for mammals and the evolutionary
    trajectory for different lineages. With this model they can identify lineages that do not conform to the usual brain size evolution
    relationship to body weight. As pretty much every other study has
    indicated humans have evolved bigger brains for their body weight and primates have a higher rate of brain size increase. Some lineages have
    lower brain size to body weight than expected. As you might expect
    these are the largest mammals. They speculate that brains take a lot
    of energy to maintain,

    Does that require speculation? Surely we *know* that the brain uses a
    lot of glucose.

    and that there is likely selection against larger brains at some point
    in body size increase. Population sizes for large mammals have to be
    smaller because it takes more food to maintain individuals. The
    estimate that I have seen is that it takes 80% of our energy production
    to run our brains. If you have smaller brains you could maintain
    larger populations. Hunter gatherer populations were probably
    restricted by our brain's energy needs. With the poorer agricultural
    diet our brains actually decreased in size as our population increased.
    We could maintain much larger populations on the same amount of
    territory, but it wasn't a diet amenable to supporting large brains.

    Ron Okimoto


    --
    Athel -- French and British, living in Marseilles for 37 years; mainly
    in England until 1987.

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  • From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to RonO on Tue Jul 16 19:05:09 2024
    On 16/07/2024 13:40, RonO wrote:
    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/07/240708101004.htm

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-024-02451-3

    The Nature article is open access.

    The authors claim that they have developed a model for the relationship between brain and body weight for mammals and the evolutionary
    trajectory for different lineages.  With this model they can identify lineages that do not conform to the usual brain size evolution
    relationship to body weight.  As pretty much every other study has
    indicated humans have evolved bigger brains for their body weight and primates have a higher rate of brain size increase.  Some lineages have lower brain size to body weight than expected.  As you might expect
    these are the largest mammals.  They speculate that brains take a lot of energy to maintain, and that there is likely selection against larger
    brains at some point in body size increase.  Population sizes for large mammals have to be smaller because it takes more food to maintain individuals.  The estimate that I have seen is that it takes 80% of our energy production to run our brains.  If you have smaller brains you
    could maintain larger populations.  Hunter gatherer populations were probably restricted by our brain's energy needs.  With the poorer agricultural diet our brains actually decreased in size as our
    population increased.  We could maintain much larger populations on the
    same amount of territory, but it wasn't a diet amenable to supporting
    large brains.

    The number floating around the web is that the brain (2% of body mass)
    consumes 20% of resting energy usage (and presumably a lower proportion
    when performing hard physical labour).

    Elsewhere I find it said that the heart and kidneys use more energy per
    gram than the brain, and the liver and spleen combined use more energy
    that the brain does.


    Ron Okimoto


    --
    alias Ernest Major

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