Maybe, but it’s going to take a long time. For the past 200,000 years or so, fatty and sugary foods were hard for humans to come by and well worth gorging on. Fats help maintain body temperature, sugars provide energy, and craving such food is hardwired: Eating fats and sugars activates reward centers in the brain.
Scientists are finding that the degree to which we experience those cravings can also be influenced by genes. Obesity runs in families, and although scientists still don’t know just how much of craving is hereditary and how much is learned, they have located more than 100 genes that seem to be linked to the disease. To evolve out of cravings, we’d need to stop passing down these genes.
Rob DeSalle, an evolutionary biologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, says that could take a while. The health conditions associated with a poor diet mostly affect middle-aged adults, who have probably already had children and passed their genes on. Perhaps, he speculates, if more children and teens get obesity-related ailments, such as heart disease and Type II diabetes, fewer will survive to reproduce, stripping craving-related genes from populations more quickly. Even then, weeding out all 100 genes is unlikely. Also, genes associated with obesity aren’t killers. They don’t code for sickle-cell anemia or cystic fibrosis. If those bad genes have hung on for a very long time, DeSalle says, marginally bad ones could hang on even longer.
Evolution is a messy process that plays out over millions of years. It typically lags far behind changes in species behavior. Until about 50 years ago, craving fats and sugars actually helped us survive. Then fast food became abundant, and the number of obese people in the U.S. tripled between 1960 and 2007. Half a century is “just not enough time to counteract millennia,” says Katie Hinde, a human evolutionary biologist at Harvard University.
Even someone genetically predisposed to crave food doesn’t have to end up fat. “Your genes are not your destiny,” DeSalle says. Take, as an extreme example, people with phenylketonuria, a recessive metabolic disorder in which a person is unable to break down phenylalanine, an amino acid, and risks mental retardation if he ingests it. By avoiding certain foods (eggs, nuts), he’ll be fine.
Image credit: Donut from Shutterstock
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Not sure what this has to do with Google TV #corrections ?
Cack-handed attempt at using the evolution of television?
What? explain. Use small words if you have to
I’m assuming that’s meant to be a (very) old TV… showing Google TV (Which if you believe some is the next step in TV/content delivery).
Hence the TV has “evolved” over the last 50 or so years….
If that’s what it is, I (think) I sort of get it. It’s still rubbish though.
Yes weird – However, sugars and fats are craved because they are addictive. Anything that activates reward centers in the brain – is addictive. Now where did I put my bag of Galaxy counters? (In moderation though, it’s perfectly fine)
Are you changing you avatar daily now?
Yeah- I have TO feel happy with it – so am trying out different ones. I like this one, it’s feels right. Do you think so?
Yes I do. Have you also considered Metal Mickey? He was a robot with magic powers (possibly before your time).
Metal Mickey – before my time? You are too kind Darrell, however, the smiley face was missing from the end.
I really despised Metal Mickey. I took the name from one of my favourite games I played growing up in the 70′s – The Magic Robot – who also had special powers. He knew the answer to any question he was asked ( As long as it was written on the question sheet) It’s still one of the greatest games ever invented. I picked one up from E-bay not long ago. I was born in the 60′s and was 10 at the time of the fabled great drought. (smile)
Since we have never met I have no idea of your age, but I am Mid forties myself so well remember the magic robot game. It was hugely popular and had a huge number of spinoff versions including an Olympic one that used the Olympic torch as the pointer. Time for a topical re-issue for that one.
Yep 10 in 76 makes me mid 40′s also – Glad you remember the Magic Robot – He had a crazy ravers type stance and huge metal cane, and was green. I just did a search and it seems there were a few different types. Funny how the robot changed his look over the years. Kids today would laugh their arses off at such a lame game. The Magic Robot – He always knew the right answer…Pure Magic
Sorry reading fail on my part. I was also born in 66.
No idea. I’m blaming gremlins in the tweaked machine
Maybe the gremlins (or Colin) have had too much sugar
Surely this is the perfect argument for a mass cull of all obese people? That will take them out the gene pool permanently. Problem solved.