Washington, April 19 (ANI): When early humans became carnivores and started eating meat, their higher-quality diet allowed mothers to wean babies earlier and have more children, with potentially profound effects on population dynamics and the course of human evolution, a new study has revealed.
In a comparison of 67 mammalian species, including humans, apes, mice, and killer whales, among many others, researchers from Lund University in Sweden found a clear correlation between carnivory and earlier weaning.
"Eating meat enabled the breast-feeding periods and thereby the time between births to be shortened. This must have had a crucial impact on human evolution," said Elia Psouni, lead author of the study.
Among natural fertility societies, the average duration of breast-feeding is 2 years and 4 months. This is not much in relation to the maximum lifespan of our species, around 120 years. It is even less if compared to our closest relatives: female chimpanzees suckle their young for 4 to 5 years, whereas the maximum lifespan for chimpanzees is only 60 years.
Many researchers have tried to explain the relatively shorter breast-feeding period of humans based on social and behavioural theories of parenting and family size.
But the Lund group has now shown that the young of all species stop suckling when their brains have reached a particular developmental stage.
The difference is that carnivores - categorized as species for which at least 20 per cent of the energy content of their diet comes from meat - reach this point earlier than herbivores or omnivores due to their higher quality diet.
Therefore, the different weaning times for humans and the great apes seems to result simply from the fact that, as a species, humans are carnivores, whereas gorillas, orangutans and chimpanzees are herbivores or omnivores.
"That humans seem to be so similar to other animals can of course be taken as provocative," Psouni said.
"We like to think that culture makes us different as a species. But when it comes to breast-feeding and weaning, no social or cultural explanations are needed; for our species as a whole it is a question of simple biology," she added.
Psouni noted that their results provide insight into how carnivory may have contributed to early humans spreading on Earth.
The finding has been published in the open access journal PLoS ONE. (ANI)
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