The Wild Life of Our Bodies: Predators, Parasites, and Partners That Shape Who We Are Today

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The Wild Life of Our Bodies: Predators, Parasites, and Partners That Shape Who We Are Today Page 29

by Rob Dunn


  5. Though it is interesting to note that humans (and perhaps some other mammals) have the ability to learn to like some bitter and sour tastes, as is the case with coffee. Just how such preferences are learned is not yet clear.

  6. This is not to say that thirst or hunger in our modern environments are entirely rational either. To the extent that our hunger has an equilibrium, it tends to be about 3,000 calories in men and 2,000 in women. With that many calories, we tend to be, on average, full. But the fact that our bodies are full after 2,000 or 3,000 calories evolved in a context when we searched for and chased down our food. We do not move as much anymore, but our hunger system remains unchanged, irrational but the same. Interestingly, exercise is a way of reenacting our former activity levels, both to use our muscles in ways similar to those in which they evolved and to burn the number of calories for which our bodies ask. Some academics have gone so far as to argue it is to remedy the discrepancy between who we were and who we are that we began to exercise in the first place.

  7. DeLoache, J. S., and LoBlue, V. 2009. The Narrow Fellow in the Grass: Human Infants Associate Snakes. Developmental Science 12: 201–207 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467–7687.2008.00753.

  8. Morris, J. S.; Öhman, A.; and Dolan, R. J. 1999. A Subcortical Pathway to the Right Amygdala Mediating “Unseen” Fear. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 96: 1680–1685.

  13: How Lice and Ticks (and Their Pathogens) Made Us Naked and Gave Us Skin Cancer

  1. Weiss, R. A. 2009. Apes, Lice and Prehistory. Journal of Biology 8:20.

  2. Kushlan, J. A. 1980. The Evolution of Hairlessness in Man. American Naturalist 116: 727–729.

  3. Malaria means bad (mala) air (aria), though given the dependence of malaria-transmitting mosquitoes on pools of stagnant water, malaqua might have been more apt. P. falciparum is, in fact, just one of several malarias.

  4. This story is even more complicated and wonderful than I have space to discuss. For additional information please read . . . DOI: 10.1126/science.1063292. Luzzatto, L., and Notaro, R. 2001. Protecting Against Bad Air. Science 293: 442–443.

  14: How the Pathogens That Made Us Naked Also Made Us Xenophobic, Collectivist, and Disgusted

  1. Thornhill, R., and Alcock, J. 1983. The Evolution of Insect Mating Systems. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

  2. Thornhill, R., and Palmer, C. T. 2000. A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

  3. The term “behavioral immune system” would not be coined until later, by Mark Schaller, but the idea was already present, albeit vaguely.

  4. For a nice, if somewhat dated, review of the responses of animals to parasites and diseases see Hart, B. L. 1992. Behavioral Adaptations to Parasites: An Ethological Approach. Journal of Parasitology 78: 256–265.

  5. Fincher, C. L.; Thornhill, R.; Murray, D. R.; and Schaller, M. 2008. Pathogen Prevalence Predicts Human Cross-cultural Variability in Individualism/Collectivism. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 275: 1279–1285.

  6. Schaller, M., and Murray, D. 2008. Pathogens, Personality and Culture: Disease Prevalence Predicts Worldwide Variability in Sociosexuality, Extraversion, and Openness to Experience. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 95: 212–221.

  7. Schaller, M.; Miller, G. E.; Gervais, W. M.; Yager, S.; and Chen, E. 2010. Mere Visual Perception of Other People’s Disease Symptoms Facilitates a More Aggressive Immune Response. Psychological Science 21: 649–652.

  8. Duncan, L. A., and Schaller, M. 2009. Prejudicial Attitudes toward Older Adults May Be Exaggerated When People Feel Vulnerable to Infectious Disease: Evidence and Implications. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy 9: 97–115.

  15: The Reluctant Revolutionary of Hope

  1. Unlike the worms being used to treat diseases associated with our immune systems, Trichinella did not evolve to live in humans. It is a pig worm, and we only encounter it when we eat pigs. Once inside our body, it is not sure what to do. Lost, it gets up to trouble, which is what makes us sick, though we tend to fare better than it does. Inside a human, it always dies, whereas with Trichinella inside us we only sometimes do.

  2. http://www.downtownexpress.com/de_133/greenroofsaregrowig.html.

  3. Ryerson University. 2009. Report on the Environmental Benefits and Costs of Green Roof Technology for the City of Toronto. http://www.toronto.ca/greenroofs/findings.htm.

  4. Skyfarming. New York Magazine http://nymag.com/newsfeatures/30020/#ixzz0aUH4bkTj.

  5. Larson, D. W.; Matthes, U.; Gerrath, J. A.; Larson, N. W. K.; Gerrath, J. M.; Nekola, J. C.; Walker, G. L.; Porembski, S.; and Charlton, A. 2000. Evidence for the Wide-spread Occurrence of Ancient Forests on Cliffs. Journal of Biogeography 27: 319–331.

  6. Larson, D. W.; Matthes, U.; and Kelley, P. E. 2000. Cliff Ecology. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.

  The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

  Index

  acacia plants, 87

  adrenaline, 155–56

  adrenal system, 145, 152, 153, 161, 162

  Afar desert, Ethiopia, fossils in, 3–5

  Africa, cultural diversity in, 137

  age, signs of, 228

  Aglietti, Garin, 57

  agriculture, 111–12

  choices in, 187–88, 196

  and civilization, 114–16

  and crop domestication, 131

  and disease, 117

  effects of, 114, 115–16, 135, 136, 214

  and evolution, 138

  and food supplies, 116, 117–18, 124, 130

  and genes, 119, 127, 133

  hydroponics, 243, 246–47

  and life expectancy, 115

  origins of, 116–18, 126

  and processing foods, 185–86

  and survival, 116, 118, 121, 124

  vertical gardens, 245–46, 248, 250–51, 257

  Alcock, John, 217–18

  Amazon:

  early settlements of, 112–15, 117

  peanuts and yucca in, 118

  amygdala, 145, 146, 153, 161, 193

  amylase, 36, 127, 132–33

  Amytis of Media, 240

  anemia, 215

  anger, 161, 162

  animals:

  in cold places, 134

  domestication of, 111–12, 120–21, 124, 153–54

  fight-or-flight response in, 145–46, 152–53, 154, 162

  germ-free, 68–76, 78–81

  hair/fur of, 203–14

  marine, 205

  tongues of, 30

  unborn, microbe-free, 70

  in zoos, 162–63

  antelopes, dental combs of, 220

  antibiotics, 62–63, 64, 65, 81, 82, 84

  antibiotic wipes, 82–83

  antibodies:

  in the appendix, 97, 99, 104

  and bacteria, 99

  function of, 99–100

  IgA, 100–103, 108

  antimicrobial agents, 62

  ants:

  and acacia plants, 87

  bacteria of, 89

  fire (Solenopsis invicta), 82

  leaf-cutter, 87–90, 102, 106–7, 245, 246

  minim, 88

  queen, 88

  in tree canopies, 208

  undertaker, 221

  anxiety, 161, 162

  apes, swimming, 205

  appendix, 64, 258

  antibodies in, 97, 99, 104

  bacteria in, 97–104

  biofilm in, 103, 104

  description of, 93

  evolution of, 94, 107–8

  function of, 93–96, 98, 104–5

  and immune system, 96, 97, 104

  lymphatic tissue in, 96

  of monkeys, 95

  as peaceful alley, 98

  removal on ship, 91–94, 96–97, 105

  Aramis, Ethiopia:

  ancient li
fe in, 13–14

  fossil discovery in, 4–5

  Ardi (Ardipithecus ramidus), 157, 252

  analysis of findings about, 10

  circumstances of discovery, 9

  discovery of, 3–10

  importance of discovery, 6

  lifestyle assumed about, 13–14, 83, 111

  published papers on discovery of, 5, 8–9, 10

  asthma, Lawrence case, 48–49, 53

  Audubon, John James, 26

  aurochs (Bos primigenius), 119–20, 121–25

  Australia, human arrival in, 12

  avocados, 29

  Babel, 85

  babies, growth charts for, 131

  baboons:

  houses of, 150–51

  predators of, 149

  Babylon, hanging gardens of, 240

  bacteria:

  and antibodies, 99

  in appendix, 97–104

  Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, 80

  cold-tolerant, 20–21, 22

  drug-resistant, 248

  in hair, 210

  in our guts, 63, 64, 67, 73, 105, 249–50

  on plant roots, 102

  removal of, 62, 68

  system of goods and bads, 185

  Bakhul, attacked by tiger, 143–45, 146, 152, 154, 155–56

  banteng (Bos javanicus), 119

  Bass, Rick, 39

  bat bugs, 211

  bears, giant short-faced (Arctodus simus), 27

  beauty, 197

  bedbugs, 211, 218, 248

  beetles, fungus-farming, 245

  Belt, Thomas, The Naturalist in Nicaragua, 206–7

  Benin, snakebites in, 178

  Bergmann, Karl Georg Lucas Christian, 134

  Bering Straits, 219

  bikini wax, 208

  Binford, Leigh, 116–19, 121, 123, 126

  biofilms, 102–4

  biological anthropologists, 6–7

  biophilia, 249

  bird feeders, 251–52

  birds:

  carrion-eating, 210

  in rookeries, 211

  births, patterns of, 151–52

  bison (Bison bison), 119

  bitter taste, 183, 189–90

  blindsight, 193–94

  blood pressure, 189

  Bolivia, 233–36

  Bollinger, Randal, 97–99, 103, 104, 105

  Bonaparte, Napoleon, 212

  Booker, Corey, 250–51

  brain:

  evolution of, 175–76

  and fear response, 153, 195, 250

  Brazil, snakebites in, 178

  breast milk, 80

  bubble boy, 76, 84

  buffalo, hunting, 158

  Byers, John, 24–28, 30, 31, 39, 67

  Byers, Karen, 24–27, 30, 31

  calories:

  from microbes, 83

  sources of, 130

  and survival, 132

  camels, extinct, 28, 34

  cancer, deaths from, 149

  CARD15 gene, 19

  carnivores, teeth of, 30

  carrion, 191, 210

  Cassia grandis tree, 29

  cats:

  saber-toothed, 27, 61

  taste buds of, 183

  and Toxoplasmosis gondii, 149-50n

  cave fish, 94–95, 176

  cave lions, giant (Panthera atrox), 27

  caves, 210–11, 255, 256

  Cavineños, 139

  cedars, eastern white (Thuja occidentalis), 254

  cellulose, 77, 79

  chance:

  and germ-free animals, 79, 81

  and inheritance, 136

  cheese, 126

  cheetahs:

  American (Miracinonyx trumani), 27–28, 61

  giant, 27

  cherimoya, 29

  chickens, 154n, 209

  chimpanzees:

  births of, 151

  eating monkeys, 174

  and human evolution, 7

  China, sparrows in, 158-59n

  chlamydia, 208

  choices, 196–99

  cholera, 98–99, 104

  circulatory system, evolution of, 188–89

  cities:

  future of, 234

  green rooftops in, 240–42, 251

  growing food in, 244, 246

  of insects, 245

  pest species in, 248

  pollution in, 258

  public gardens in, 244

  restoring nature in, 249

  species of, 256

  structure of, 233

  urban cliffs, 255–57

  vertical gardens in, 245–46, 248, 250–51, 257

  civilization, and agriculture, 114–16

  cliffs, life on, 254–57

  Clutton-Brock, Juliet, 120

  cockroaches, 248

  collectivism, 222, 223, 226–27, 228

  colon, biofilm in, 103, 104

  Columbus, Christopher, 219

  Colwell, Rob, 177

  commensals, 68

  communication, failure of, 85–86

  consciousness, 252–53

  Copenhagen, Denmark, 19

  Corbett, Jim, 145, 154, 155–56, 158–60

  corn syrup, high-fructose, 187

  cortisol, 225

  Costa Rica, fruit in, 29

  cows:

  aurochs, 119–20, 121–25

  descendants of, 125

  digesting milk from, 122–23

  domestication of, 123–24, 125, 127, 132, 154, 196

  fear response in, 153–54

  as food source, 128

  grooming of, 220

  milking, 120

  coyotes, 165

  crabs:

  evolution of, 179, 196

  genital (Pthirus pubis), 207

  credibility, 5

  Crohn’s disease, 18–23

  devising an experiment for, 33–34, 36–39

  gene for, 19

  incidence of, 19, 31

  and intestinal parasites, 22–23, 31–34

  and pig nematode experiment, 36–38

  refrigerator bacteria and, 20–21, 22

  traditional treatments for, 55–56

  treatment options for, 57

  Wade case, 45–48, 52–55, 56

  Croswell, Amy, 65–66, 81–82, 105

  Crutsinger, Greg, 177

  C-section, babies born by, 80

  cultural diversity, 137–38

  cultures:

 

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