steve_bank
Diabetic retinopathy and poor eyesight. Typos ...
According to an infomercial you need to eat worms from a special place in Australia if you ant to be healthy.
Surely one of the best sources of vitamin g (for gullible).According to an infomercial you need to eat worms from a special place in Australia if you ant to be healthy.
For human nutrition, there are six types of essential nutrients. Some are needed in much greater quantity than some others: macronutrients vs. micronutrients.
Water - H2O - every organism needs it to metabolize, and thus to grow and reproduce
I've read conflicting claims on whether carbs are truly essential. They are our default source of calories, but we are well capable of extracting calories from fat, proteins, even organic acid and alcohol (indeed the caloric content of alcohol per 100g is significantly higher than carbs and close to fat, and acetic acid's isn't much below carbs).Carbohydrates - sugars and sugar-like stuff, combinations of C6H12O6 units:
There are many alleged examples, though "obtains all required water from its food" isn't exactly "obtains all required water as a metabolic byproduct of its food", and I am not aware of any demonstration of the latter.Water is produced as a waste product during the aerobic metabolism of carbs and fat, an organism that's better at retaining it could make do with that, at least hypothetically, no? Are there any examples of organisms that do?
According to an infomercial you need to eat worms from a special place in Australia if you ant to be healthy.
Hmm. Ethanol (CH 3CH 2OH) is a pure hydrocarbon... is that different from a carbohydrate, functionally/metabolically speaking?the caloric content of alcohol per 100g is significantly higher than carbs
If there's no advantage why would it spread through the population?It doesn't need to even come along with anything beneficial. If you are a frugivore, losing the ability to synthesise vitamin c is a perfectly neutral mutation. A frugivore will starve to death long before suffering a lack of vitamin c if they can't find enough fruit to cover their vitamin needs. Obviously different fruit have different vitamin content, say 30mg per 100g or thereabouts for apples, depending on breed and location and climate etc, up to 1250mg/100g, which is the figure most widely quoted for rose hips (yes, that's more than 1% by mass). But even with a relatively low vitamin c fruit, by the time you've ingested enough fruit sugar to cover your calory needs - let alone enough protein - vitamin c isn't something you need to worry about.I doubt it's so much that it's an evolutionary advantage, but that it came along with something beneficial. The energy cost of being able to synthesize it simply isn't that great.Too much or too little ANYTHING is not good.Too much or too little sodium is not good.
Too little of some things is tolerable, as long as you can synthesise or substitute that thing. But as a general rule, bigger or smaller amounts than is typical, in the wide range of human long-term diets, is going to be uncomfortable, if not fatal.
Humans are fragile creatures, like all organisms that evolved in an environment where complex nutrients were readily available.
If I can out-compete my contemporaries, by dropping ascorbate synthesis in favour of obtaining it from my diet, then that's obviously the winning evolutionary strategy - right up until my environment changes to an eighteenth century transoceanic sailing ship, which has no citrus fruits or sauerkraut on board.
Neutral mutations however can spread and reach fixation by pure chance, as per genetic drift. So in a frugivorous population, losing this ability isn't going to do anything, and the mutants can easily (especially in a small population) come to dominate and eventually the wild type become extinct by pure chance - millions of years before their descendents switch to an insect or grain based diet where this becomes an issue.
Because some individuals live and others die, and the one that live usually are rarely prefectly representative of the overall population. Mathematically, it's a random walk in a finite space with absorbant walls: if you start with 0 and randomly add or subtract 1 until you reach +/-100 (eg if you you'd coins for a dollar per round), chances are you won't be playing very long before you either gained or lost a hundred. A new neutral Mutation is like that game, only it starts with -99: most of the time, it hits the left wall, ie -100 or going extinct again, pretty fast - but some new mutations survive by pure chance and eventually hit the right wall, that is reach fixation. Gamblers have been known to come home with 1000s of dollars after going to the casino with tens, and their situation is more like that of a moderately negative mutation, statistically.If there's no advantage why would it spread through the population?It doesn't need to even come along with anything beneficial. If you are a frugivore, losing the ability to synthesise vitamin c is a perfectly neutral mutation. A frugivore will starve to death long before suffering a lack of vitamin c if they can't find enough fruit to cover their vitamin needs. Obviously different fruit have different vitamin content, say 30mg per 100g or thereabouts for apples, depending on breed and location and climate etc, up to 1250mg/100g, which is the figure most widely quoted for rose hips (yes, that's more than 1% by mass). But even with a relatively low vitamin c fruit, by the time you've ingested enough fruit sugar to cover your calory needs - let alone enough protein - vitamin c isn't something you need to worry about.I doubt it's so much that it's an evolutionary advantage, but that it came along with something beneficial. The energy cost of being able to synthesize it simply isn't that great.Too much or too little ANYTHING is not good.Too much or too little sodium is not good.
Too little of some things is tolerable, as long as you can synthesise or substitute that thing. But as a general rule, bigger or smaller amounts than is typical, in the wide range of human long-term diets, is going to be uncomfortable, if not fatal.
Humans are fragile creatures, like all organisms that evolved in an environment where complex nutrients were readily available.
If I can out-compete my contemporaries, by dropping ascorbate synthesis in favour of obtaining it from my diet, then that's obviously the winning evolutionary strategy - right up until my environment changes to an eighteenth century transoceanic sailing ship, which has no citrus fruits or sauerkraut on board.
Neutral mutations however can spread and reach fixation by pure chance, as per genetic drift. So in a frugivorous population, losing this ability isn't going to do anything, and the mutants can easily (especially in a small population) come to dominate and eventually the wild type become extinct by pure chance - millions of years before their descendents switch to an insect or grain based diet where this becomes an issue.
I think it needs that O to stay together, but I may be (probably am) wrong.CH3CH2OH isn't a pure hydrocarbon. Its overall formula is C2H6O -- one oxygen.
Or should that be 'you need to eat ants from a special place in Austria if you worm to be healthy'?According to an infomercial you need to eat worms from a special place in Australia if you ant to be healthy.
One could class ethanol as a carbohydrate, as it's basically ethylene plus water; But it's not metabolised in the same way as carbohydrates are.I think it needs that O to stay together, but I may be (probably am) wrong.CH3CH2OH isn't a pure hydrocarbon. Its overall formula is C2H6O -- one oxygen.
Anyhow, is it metabolically a lot different from cane sugar?
In other words, that's just what genes do when survival is not fully deterministic. A carrier of a neutral mutation may have a predicted average of 2.0 offspring of which an average of 1.0 carry his variant, but the actual values will rarely be exactly that. If you initialise a population with 2000 different variants, and create each new generation by randomly picking an individual of the previous one as the progenitor for each of 2000 new individuals, one of the variants eventually comes to dominate, typically sooner than you may think, and each one has an equal chance to do so.If there's no advantage why would it spread through the population?It doesn't need to even come along with anything beneficial. If you are a frugivore, losing the ability to synthesise vitamin c is a perfectly neutral mutation. A frugivore will starve to death long before suffering a lack of vitamin c if they can't find enough fruit to cover their vitamin needs. Obviously different fruit have different vitamin content, say 30mg per 100g or thereabouts for apples, depending on breed and location and climate etc, up to 1250mg/100g, which is the figure most widely quoted for rose hips (yes, that's more than 1% by mass). But even with a relatively low vitamin c fruit, by the time you've ingested enough fruit sugar to cover your calory needs - let alone enough protein - vitamin c isn't something you need to worry about.I doubt it's so much that it's an evolutionary advantage, but that it came along with something beneficial. The energy cost of being able to synthesize it simply isn't that great.Too much or too little ANYTHING is not good.Too much or too little sodium is not good.
Too little of some things is tolerable, as long as you can synthesise or substitute that thing. But as a general rule, bigger or smaller amounts than is typical, in the wide range of human long-term diets, is going to be uncomfortable, if not fatal.
Humans are fragile creatures, like all organisms that evolved in an environment where complex nutrients were readily available.
If I can out-compete my contemporaries, by dropping ascorbate synthesis in favour of obtaining it from my diet, then that's obviously the winning evolutionary strategy - right up until my environment changes to an eighteenth century transoceanic sailing ship, which has no citrus fruits or sauerkraut on board.
Neutral mutations however can spread and reach fixation by pure chance, as per genetic drift. So in a frugivorous population, losing this ability isn't going to do anything, and the mutants can easily (especially in a small population) come to dominate and eventually the wild type become extinct by pure chance - millions of years before their descendents switch to an insect or grain based diet where this becomes an issue.
It would be possible for it to spread because it happened in the same critter that also gained a beneficial change but that's quite a coincidence.