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Humans have evolved to require far higher levels of exercise to be healthy. New research reveals that as human anatomy and behavior shifted over the past two million years, so, too, did physiology. Our physiology adapted to the intensive physical activity that hunting and gathering requires.
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Read More »In the predawn damp of a Ugandan rain forest nearly 20 years ago, I stared up through the crowded canopy at a party of eight chimpanzees sleeping overhead. Our team of three researchers and two field assistants had woken up an hour before, wiggling into rubber boots and hastily assembling backpacks before setting out on muddy trails by headlamp. Now at our destination, the lights were off, and we stood there silently, submerged in a black ocean of forest, the surface 30 meters above, listening to the chimps chuffing and shifting in their leafy nests. As a young Ph.D. student studying human and ape evolution, I was in Kibale National Park that summer to measure how much chimpanzees climb each day. It seemed to me that the energy spent climbing might be a critical factor in chimpanzee ecology and evolution, shaping their anatomy to maximize climbing efficiency, thus sparing calories for reproduction and other essential tasks. Months earlier, while mulling over summer research plans from the comfort of my desk at snowy Harvard University, I envisioned chimpanzees waging a heroic struggle for existence, working hard on a daily basis to eke out a living. But as I settled into the rhythm of fieldwork that summer, following chimpanzees from dawn to dusk, I came to a very different conclusion: chimpanzees are lazy. Only recently have I come to appreciate what ape idleness tells us about human evolution. People are drawn to apes because we see so much of ourselves in them. It is not just that we share more than 97 percent of our DNA with orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos. Apes are clever, use tools, fight and make up, and sneak off to have sex. Some will kill their neighbors over turf and hunt other species for food. The kids learn from their mothers, wrestle and play with one another, and throw tantrums. And the further back in time we go in the fossil record, the more apelike our ancestors look. No species alive today is a perfect model of the past—all lineages change over time. But living apes provide the best chance to see where we came from and to understand how much of us is ancient and unchanged. And yet it is the differences, rather than the similarities, between humans and apes that are casting new light on the way our bodies work. Discoveries from fossil excavations, zoos and laboratories around the world are revealing just how radically our bodies changed over the past two million years. For decades researchers have known that this last chapter of our evolution was marked by major anatomical and ecological changes—among them, ballooning brain size, hunting and scavenging, increasingly complex stone tools and larger body size. But they have generally assumed that these were changes in shape and behavior, not in the fundamental function of our cells. Current advances are overturning that view, showing how humans have changed physiologically as well. Unlike our ape cousins, we have evolved a dependency on physical activity. We must move to survive.
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Read More »The evolution of an upright, striding bipedal gait in these early hominins is important, indicating a different approach for navigating their landscape. Covering more ground for fewer calories might have enabled these species to expand their range and thrive in less productive habitats than apes today. There are other notable and intriguing changes, too, such as the loss of big, sharp canines in males, which seem to reflect changes in social behavior. Yet the plant-based diet and retained climbing adaptations tell us their foraging ecology and daily activity remained quite apelike. Distances traveled per day were probably modest, with lots of time spent resting and digesting bellyfuls of fibrous plant food. It is unlikely they needed, or often got, their 10,000 steps a day. Some two million years ago the telltale signs of curious or clever hominins experimenting with new ideas and approaches began to emerge. In 2015 Sonia Harmand of Stony Brook University and her team recovered large, unwieldy stone tools, some weighing more than 30 pounds, from 3.3-million-year-old sediments on the western shore of Lake Turkana in Kenya. In the past 15 years excavations at 2.6-million-year-old sites in both Ethiopia and Kenya have found stone tools associated with fossilized animal bones bearing the unmistakable gouges and scrapes of butchery. By 1.8 million years ago cut-marked bones and stone tools were the norm, and it was not just the sick and injured animals that fell prey to these hominins. Analyses of butchered bones at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania show that prime-aged ungulates were targeted. Just as important, unlike every hominin before, by 1.8 million years ago hominins had expanded outside of Africa into Eurasia, from the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains to the rain forests of Indonesia. Our predecessors had jumped the ecological fence and were capable of thriving nearly anywhere. Forget the tales of some clandestine meeting in the Garden of Eden or of Prometheus doling out fire. It was this million-year dalliance with stones and meat and the development of a hunting-and-gathering strategy that pushed our lineage away from the other apes, changing things irrevocably. This tectonic shift marked the evolutionary emergence of us, the genus Homo.
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Read More »Although we have long known that exercise is good for us humans, we are only beginning to appreciate the myriad ways our physiology has adapted to the physically active way of life that hunting and gathering demands. Nearly every organ system is implicated, down to the cellular level. Some of the most exciting work in this area has focused on the brain. For one thing, our brain has evolved to get less sleep, even in societies without artificial lighting or other modern nighttime distractions. Humans around the globe—whether it is the Hadza on the African savanna, the Tsimane horticulturalists in the Amazonian rain forest or urbanites in New York—clock about seven hours of sleep a night, far less than apes. Raichlen and his colleagues have shown that our brain has evolved to reward prolonged physical activity, producing endocannabinoids—the so-called runner’s high—in response to aerobic exercise such as jogging. Raichlen and others have even argued that exercise helped to enable the massive expansion of the human brain and that we have evolved to require physical activity for normal brain development. Exercise causes the release of neurotrophic molecules that promote neurogenesis and brain growth, and it is known to improve memory and stave off age-related cognitive decline. Our metabolic engines have evolved to accommodate increased activity as well. Humans’ maximum sustained power output, our VO 2max , is at least four times greater than that of chimpanzees. This increase stems largely from changes in our leg muscles, which are 50 percent bigger and have a much greater proportion of “slow-twitch” fatigue-resistant fibers than the leg muscles of other apes. We also have more red blood cells to carry oxygen to working muscles. But the adaptations to exercise appear to go even deeper, accelerating the rate with which our cells function and burn calories. My work with Ross, Raichlen and others has shown that humans have evolved a faster metabolism, providing fuel for increased physical activity and the other energetically costly traits that set humans apart, including bigger brains. All of this evidence points toward a new way of thinking about physical activity. Since the sweaty spandex excitement of the 1980s, exercise has been sold as a way to lose weight or as a health-conscious buffet item to add to our lifestyle, like oat bran muffins. But exercise is not optional; it is essential, and weight loss is probably the one health benefit it largely fails to deliver. Our bodies are evolved to require daily physical activity, and consequently exercise does not make our bodies work more so much as it makes them work better. Research from my lab and others has shown that physical activity has little effect on daily energy expenditure (Hadza hunter-gatherers burn the same number of calories every day as sedentary Westerners), which is one reason exercise is a poor tool for weight loss. Instead exercise regulates the way the body spends energy and coordinates vital tasks. Recent advances in metabolomics have shown that exercising muscles release hundreds of signaling molecules into the body, and we are only beginning to learn the full extent of their physiological reach. Endurance exercise reduces chronic inflammation, a serious risk factor for cardiovascular disease. It lowers resting levels of the steroid hormones testosterone, estrogen and progesterone, which helps account for the reduced rate of reproductive cancers among adults who exercise regularly. Exercise may blunt the morning rise in cortisol, the stress hormone. It is known to reduce insulin insensitivity, the immediate mechanism behind type 2 diabetes, and helps to shuttle glucose into muscle glycogen stores instead of fat. Regular exercise improves the effectiveness of our immune system to stave off infection, especially as we age. Even light activity, such as standing instead of sitting, causes muscles to produce enzymes that help to clear fat from circulating blood. No wonder populations such as the Hadza do not develop heart disease, diabetes or the other maladies that afflict industrial countries. But we do not need to cosplay as hunter-gatherers or run marathons to reap the benefits of a more evolutionarily informed life. The lesson from groups such as the Hadza, Tsimane and others is that volume matters more than intensity. They are on their feet and moving from sunrise until dusk, racking up more than two hours of physical activity a day, most of it as walking. We can emulate these same habits by walking or biking instead of driving, taking the stairs, and finding ways to work and play that keep us off our butts. A recent study of Glaswegian postal workers shows us what this can look like. These men and women were not committed athletes but were active throughout the day, handling the mail. Those who got 15,000 steps or spent seven hours a day on their feet (numbers similar to what we see with the Hadza) had the best cardiovascular health and no metabolic disease. While we are at it, we might take other lessons for living well from groups like the Hadza. Beyond the copious amounts of exercise and whole food diets, daily life for these cultures is full of fresh air, friendships and family. Egalitarianism is the rule, and economic inequality is low. We do not know exactly how these factors affect the health of hunter-gatherers, but we know their absence contributes to chronic stress in the developed world, which in turn promotes obesity and disease. Embracing more physically active life habits would be easier if we did not have to wrestle with the 400-pound gorilla in our head. Like vitamin C for our anthropoid ancestors, exercise was unavoidable and plentiful during the last two million years of hominin evolution. There was no need to seek it out, no evolutionary pressure to lose the ancient, simian weakness for gluttony and sloth. Today, as masters of our environments, we are giving our inner apes too much say in how the modern world is engineered: filling up on easy food, bingeing The Walking Dead instead of actually walking, sitting for hours at our desks grooming one another on social media. We are fascinated when we see ourselves in great apes, but we should worry when we see them in us. Underneath the surface, we are more different than we seem.
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