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Hi, this is Dr. Sofia Pineda Ochoa with Meat Your Future. Are humans
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herbivores, carnivores or omnivores? It's very important for a given animal to eat what
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they are physiologically and anatomically designed to eat, to improve the chances of
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survival and health. So, what are humans designed to eat? When looking at a
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species to determine what they are in terms of carnivore, omnivore or herbivore, we can
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look at their behavior or we can look their biology. From a behavioral
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standpoint, humans behave as omnivores because we observe many humans in their behavior eating
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a wide variety of both animal and plant-based foods. Biologically, however, from
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a physiologic and anatomic standpoint, it's a different story.
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Dr. William C. Roberts from the National Institutes of Health and Baylor
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University — who is the editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Cardiology and one
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of the most prominent cardiologists in the world, with over 1,500 publications
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in peer-reviewed medical journals — summarized our answer very nicely. He wrote:
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“Although most of conduct our lives as omnivores, in that we eat flesh
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as well as vegetables and fruits, human beings have characteristics of
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herbivores, not carnivores. The appendages of carnivores are claws; those of herbivores
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are hands or hooves. The teeth of carnivores are sharp; those of herbivores are mainly flat (for grinding).
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The intestinal tract of carnivores is short (3 times body length); that of herbivores is
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long (12 times body length). Body cooling of carnivores is done by panting;
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herbivores, by sweating. Carnivores drink
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fluids by lapping; herbivores by sipping Carnivores produce their own vitamin C,
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whereas herbivores obtain it from their diet
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Thus, humans have characteristics of herbivores, not carnivores."
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That's right.
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Humans have characteristics of herbivores, not carnivores or omnivores — because omnivores,
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like bears raccoons, actually retain most of the carnivorous
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characteristics, so that they are still able to digest and hunt their prey, and do so
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effectively. Although we behave like omnivores, our digestive system actually resembles
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that of the chimpanzees and other great apes, who eat mostly plants. The percentage of
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animal foods that chimpanzees do eat is very low, if any, about 2 to 3%
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and mainly termites and other insects. Regarding the gastrointestinal system --
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humans, like herbivores, have a relatively smaller opening of the oral cavity
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compared to the head size. Carnivores have a wide mouth in relation to the head size, and their
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jaw joint is a hinge joint, very strong and stable lying in the same plane as the teeth; the
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lower jaw of a carnivore doesn't move forward and there's very limited side-to-side
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motion. Like herbivores, our jaw joint is positioned above the level of the teeth, and because it
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has an expanded angle, the lower jaw has more sideways motion and more lateral and
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complex motion for chewing plant foods. Our jaw joints are less stable and strong
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than those of carnivores therefore, and could be easily dislocated if we
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actually tried to prey on an animal. On the other hand,
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if a carnivore had our more unstable jaws, and dislocated their jaw, they would probably starve and die, or be preyed upon; so, it would be
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very disadvantages to a carnivore to have jaws like ours. Herbivores chew food to disrupt
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plant cell walls for better digestion and to mix it with saliva, because unlike carnivores,
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who mostly swallow the food without chewing and mixing it with saliva, herbivores and humans
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have saliva that contains digestive enzymes. So, our digestion starts in the chewing process.
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The saliva of carnivorous animals does not contain any enzymes for digestion.
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Teeth are strikingly different as well.
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Our canines are flattened, blunt and small, shaped like a spade and non-serrated; unlike
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carnivores, who have them elongated and dagger-like, which are often serrated for killing and
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tearing their pray. Our molars and premolars are squared and flattened for grinding and crushing;
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unlike carnivores, who have them sharp, jagged and shaped like a blade.
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If we humans tried to kill a giraffe, for example, with our teeth,
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we'd sooner get kicked by the animal. Or, if we successfully snuck-up and
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actually tried to really bite into the live animal, it could could easily result in
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some of our teeth falling out or our jaw dislocating. We would for sure end up
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with a very annoyed giraffe, but not a dead one to prey upon. And on to the stomach. Our stomach
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volume is, like herbivores, about 25% of our gastrointestinal tract; unlike carnivores,
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who have a very large stomach volume with twice as much capacity, about 60 to
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70% of their total G.I. tract volume, which allows them to kill maybe once a
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week, gorge on large amounts of meat, and digest later.
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The pH of our stomach is about 4 to 5, with food;
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unlike carnivores who secrete a lot more hydrochloric acid
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and have a stomach pH that is a lot more acidic (their pH is usually one or less,
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with food). The more acidic stomach of a carnivore is advantageous to kill bacteria found in
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decaying flesh. As Dr. Roberts mentioned, humans, like herbivores, have a very long small intestine,
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about 10 times the length of our body; unlike the intestines in carnivorous animals, which are
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short, only about 3 to 5 times their body length. The long intestines in
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humans and herbivores is necessary for the fibers in plants, which require
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longer and more elaborate guts, sometimes even sacculated like the human gut.
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And, there are some striking physiologic differences as well. Just like other herbivores,
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humans require vitamin C from plants. If we don't eat vitamin C, we get a disease
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called scurvy where we are unable to make collagen, which is
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the building substance of mostly everything in our body (so, lack of vitamin C can
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result in problems in our bones, bleeding gums, problems with healing, etc.).
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And vitamin C is found exclusively in plants. Mammals that are primarily carnivorous do
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not need to eat vitamin C from their diets. They make their own vitamin C. Also, vitamin A
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is telling. There are two types of vitamin A: (1) preformed vitamin A, like retinol, found in animal
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products like meat, liver, dairy products, eggs and fish; and (2) pro-vitamin A,
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carotenoids, found in plant foods. The form of vitamin A that comes from
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animals can be toxic to humans in large quantities. The livers of animals that
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are primarily carnivorous have the capacity to detoxify vitamin A.
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However, our livers are unable to do this. In this paper published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
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scientists expressed concern that excess of the vitamin A that comes from animals is
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not always identified and can cause serious problems. They say, “excessive
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vitamin A intake may be a growing but underappreciated problem.” And apparently
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this problem is nothing new. The scientists reported that: “Fossilized skeletal
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remains of early humans suggest that bone abnormalities may
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have been caused by hypervitaminosis A [which means excess of vitamin A]. From these
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and other reports, vitamin A toxicity is known to be an ancient phenomenon.”
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So, it looks like have been behavior omnivores for quite some time now, notwithstanding our biology.
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The last thing I want to point out is actually a very sad thing. A characteristic that is unique to
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herbivores and not in carnivores, and it's a problem in humans. It's something that
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Dr. Roberts pointed out as well: “Atherosclerosis affects only herbivores.
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Dogs, cats, tigers, and lions can be saturated with fat and cholesterol,
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and atherosclerotic plaques do not develop.”
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That's right. Carnivores and omnivores — animals who are designed to eat other animals — can eat all the
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animals and animal products they want and they never develop atherosclerosis,
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which are plaques of cholesterol coating our vessels that can occlude the blood flow that goes
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to our heart and brain [and] cause heart attacks and strokes. Cholesterol in our
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diet is only present in animal products, and we don't need to consume any of it,
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because our body synthesizes already all of the cholesterol that we need for all of our biologic needs.
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Animals that are not designed to eat meat, like herbivores, including humans, do develop atherosclerosis. We do develop
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this problematic coating of cholesterol in our arteries, and we do it big time. Atherosclerosis is ubiquitous on
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a Western diet with animal products since very early in our lives. We really do end up
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paying a price for behaving like omnivores, when we are biologically designed as herbivores.
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Thanks you very much.