Constraint and trade-offs regulate energy expenditure during childhood.
Abstract
Children's metabolic energy expenditure is central to evolutionary and epidemiological
frameworks for understanding variation in human phenotype and health. Nonetheless,
the impact of a physically active lifestyle and heavy burden of infectious disease
on child metabolism remains unclear. Using energetic, activity, and biomarker measures,
we show that Shuar forager-horticulturalist children of Amazonian Ecuador are ~25%
more physically active and, in association with immune activity, have ~20% greater
resting energy expenditure than children from industrial populations. Despite these
differences, Shuar children's total daily energy expenditure, measured using doubly
labeled water, is indistinguishable from industrialized counterparts. Trade-offs in
energy allocation between competing physiological tasks, within a constrained energy
budget, appear to shape childhood phenotypic variation (e.g., patterns of growth).
These trade-offs may contribute to the lifetime obesity and metabolic health disparities
that emerge during rapid economic development.
Type
Journal articleSubject
HumansExercise
Life Style
Age Factors
Energy Metabolism
Child
Female
Male
Public Health Surveillance
Biomarkers
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21130Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1126/sciadv.aax1065Publication Info
Urlacher, Samuel S; Snodgrass, J Josh; Dugas, Lara R; Sugiyama, Lawrence S; Liebert,
Melissa A; Joyce, Cara J; & Pontzer, Herman (2019). Constraint and trade-offs regulate energy expenditure during childhood. Science advances, 5(12). pp. eaax1065. 10.1126/sciadv.aax1065. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21130.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Herman Pontzer
Associate Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology
How did the human body evolve, and how does our species' deep past shape our health
and physiology today? Through lab and field research, I investigate the physiology
of humans and apes to understand how ecology, lifestyle, diet, and evolutionary history
affect metabolism and health. I'm also interested in how ecology and evolution influence
musculoskeletal design and physical activity. Field projects focus on small-scale
societies, including hunter-gatherers and subsistence farmers, in Africa a

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