Moms Responsible For Big Brains In Babies
Reported March 30, 2011
Brain growth in babies is linked to the amount of time and energy mothers
‘invest’, according to this study.
The study of 128 mammal species, including humans, shows that brain growth in
babies is determined by the duration of pregnancy and how long they suckle. The
Durham University research concludes that the longer the pregnancy and
breastfeeding period in mammals, the bigger the baby's brain grows.
The researchers say the findings reinforce the suggestion that breast is best
for brain development and add further weight to the World Health Organization's
advice of six months' exclusive breastfeeding followed by continuing
breastfeeding up to the age of two or beyond supplemented with solid foods.
The study helps to explain why humans, who suckle their babies for up to three
years in addition to their nine-month pregnancies, have such a long period of
dependency as this is necessary to support the growth of our enormous 1300cc
brains.
In comparison, species such as fallow deer, which are about the same body weight
as humans, are only pregnant for seven months with a suckling period of up to
six months, resulting in brains of only 220cc, six times smaller than the human
brain.
Anthropologists from Durham’s Evolutionary Anthropology Research Group found
that brain size relative to body size was most closely linked to maternal
investment – the amount of time a mother spends carrying her offspring in
pregnancy and how long she continues to breastfeed. The study shows that length
of the pregnancy determines brain size at birth and the period of lactation
decides brain growth after birth. It also shows that mothers with higher
metabolic rates can afford to fuel faster brain growth in the fetus.
"We already know that large-brained species develop slowly, mature later and
have longer lifespans but what has not always been clear is why brains and life
histories are related,” lead investigator, Professor Robert Barton from Durham
University's Department of Anthropology, was quoted as saying.
"One theory is that large brains increase lifespan by making the animal more
generally flexible in its behavioural responses to unpredictable challenges,
permitting slower life histories. However, our findings suggest that the
slow-down in life histories is directly related to the costs rather than the
benefits of growing a large brain. The necessary benefits to offset these costs
could come in other ways, such as improving specific perceptual and cognitive
abilities, rather than through some generalized flexibility,” Barton was quoted
as saying.
"Our findings help us to understand what the implications are of evolutionary
changes at different stages, before and after birth, but we now need to do more
research to pinpoint exactly how changes to the pre- and postnatal growth phases
affect the structure of the brain,” Barton said.
SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, published online March
28, 2011
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