(Ivanhoe Newswire) – A new study from Australia shows gender plays a
major role in determining which foods help us live longer and give us a better
chance of having children.
Researchers are doing long-term studies on Australian black field crickets. They
discovered the lifespan of both males and females is maximized on
high-carbohydrate, low-protein diets.
But how well they're able to reproduce differs dramatically between the sexes
when the balance of carbohydrates and proteins is changed. Results show males
live longest and have the greatest reproductive success with a diet when the
carb to protein ration is eight-to-one. But females do best when it is just
one-to-one. When they're given a choice, females eat only a small amount more
protein than males.
"Male and female crickets maximize their fitness on different diets, lead
author, Dr. Alexei Maklakov, University of New South Wales, was quoted as
saying. "Despite that, the dietary preferences of the sexes are very similar.
Instead of selecting foods in a sex-specific manner, males and females select
'intermediate' diets that are less than optimal for both sexes."
So what's the significance of the findings for humans?
"Men and women invest differently in reproduction, a difference that is even
more marked than that between male and female crickets," Associate Professor,
Rob Brooks, University of New South Wales, was quoted as saying. "Think of the
tremendous amounts of energy and protein required of a mother in carrying a baby
to term and breastfeeding. We also know that men and women need to eat different
diets - think of the careful attention we pay to what expectant mothers eat."
SOURCE: Current Biology, 2008