Split-scene illustration contrasting thriving hunter-gatherers in nature with stressed modern humans in urban environments, illustrating biology-lifestyle mismatch.
Split-scene illustration contrasting thriving hunter-gatherers in nature with stressed modern humans in urban environments, illustrating biology-lifestyle mismatch.
Imagen generada por IA

Modern life clashes with human biology shaped by nature, anthropologists say

Imagen generada por IA
Verificado por hechos

Evolutionary anthropologists argue that human physiology, honed over hundreds of thousands of years for active, nature-rich hunter-gatherer lives, is poorly suited to the chronic pressures of industrialized environments. This mismatch, they say, is contributing to declining fertility and rising rates of inflammatory disease, and should prompt a rethink of how cities and societies are designed.

Human biology evolved over hundreds of thousands of years to cope with the demands of hunter-gatherer life, which involved frequent movement, short bursts of intense stress and daily exposure to natural environments. By contrast, industrialization has transformed human surroundings within just a few centuries, adding noise, air and light pollution, continuous sensory input, processed foods, microplastics, pesticides and long periods of sitting, according to a new review in Biological Reviews.

The paper, by evolutionary anthropologists Colin Shaw of the University of Zurich and Daniel Longman of Loughborough University, argues that modern stressors such as traffic, workplace pressure, social media and persistent noise activate the same biological pathways that once helped humans escape predators.

"In our ancestral environments, we were well adapted to deal with acute stress to evade or confront predators," Shaw says in a statement released by the University of Zurich. "The lion would come around occasionally, and you had to be ready to defend yourself — or run. The key is that the lion goes away again."

Today, many pressures do not subside so quickly. "Our body reacts as though all these stressors were lions," Longman explains in the university release. "Whether it's a difficult discussion with your boss or traffic noise, your stress response system is still the same as if you were facing lion after lion. As a result, you have a very powerful response from your nervous system, but no recovery."

In their review, Shaw and Longman contend that this environmental mismatch is undermining evolutionary fitness, defined as the ability to survive and reproduce. They highlight falling fertility rates across much of the world and growing rates of inflammatory and autoimmune conditions as indicators that modern environments are straining human biology.

One widely studied example, they note, is the decline in sperm count and sperm motility reported since the 1950s. The researchers point to studies suggesting links between these trends and environmental pollutants, including pesticides, herbicides in food and microplastics.

"There's a paradox where, on the one hand, we've created tremendous wealth, comfort and healthcare for a lot of people on the planet," Shaw says, "but on the other hand, some of these industrial achievements are having detrimental effects on our immune, cognitive, physical and reproductive functions."

Shaw emphasizes that biological evolution proceeds far more slowly than technological and environmental change. "Biological adaptation is very slow. Longer-term genetic adaptations are multigenerational — tens to hundreds of thousands of years," he says. As a result, the authors argue, the mismatch between human physiology and modern living conditions is unlikely to resolve itself through natural selection alone.

Instead, they call for deliberate cultural and environmental changes to reduce chronic stress and bring living conditions closer to those in which humans evolved. That includes treating access to nature as a public health priority, protecting or restoring landscapes that resemble ancestral environments and redesigning urban spaces to limit harmful exposures such as noise and light pollution.

"One approach is to fundamentally rethink our relationship with nature — treating it as a key health factor and protecting or regenerating spaces that resemble those from our hunter-gatherer past," Shaw says in an interview published by Phys.org. Another, he adds, is to design "healthier, more resilient cities" that take human physiology into account.

Shaw, who co-leads the Human Evolutionary EcoPhysiology research group, says his team’s work can help identify which stimuli most strongly affect blood pressure, heart rate and immune function, and share that information with policymakers. "We need to get our cities right — and at the same time regenerate, value and spend more time in natural spaces," he says.

Qué dice la gente

X discussions affirm the evolutionary mismatch between human biology shaped by hunter-gatherer lifestyles and modern industrialized environments, linking it to fertility declines and inflammatory diseases. Some users express agreement through personal anecdotes or summaries, while others are skeptical, viewing the ideas as obvious, anti-progress, or dismissively hippie-like.

Artículos relacionados

Illustration of animals affected by chronic diseases, with a scientist analyzing shared human-animal health risks in a lab setting.
Imagen generada por IA

Estudio traza el aumento de enfermedades crónicas en animales y los factores compartidos con humanos

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA Verificado por hechos

Los animales en mascotas, ganado, vida silvestre y acuicultura están cada vez más afectados por enfermedades crónicas tradicionalmente asociadas con las personas. Un artículo en Risk Analysis dirigido por la Universidad Agrícola de Atenas describe un modelo integrado para monitorear y gestionar estas condiciones en diferentes especies.

Nueva investigación de la Universidad de Nueva York indica que la ansiedad por envejecer, particularmente las preocupaciones por el deterioro de la salud, se correlaciona con un envejecimiento celular acelerado en mujeres. El estudio, con 726 participantes, utilizó relojes epigenéticos para medir las tasas de envejecimiento biológico. Los miedos relacionados con la apariencia o la fertilidad no mostraron una conexión similar.

Reportado por IA Verificado por hechos

En una reciente entrevista de acceso abierto, el Dr. Eric J. Nestler, decano Anne y Joel Ehrenkranz de la Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, repasa casi cuatro décadas de investigación sobre cómo el estrés y las drogas remodelan la función cerebral. Destaca el papel del factor de transcripción ΔFosB en los cambios conductuales duraderos y argumenta que comprender la resiliencia natural podría cambiar la atención de la salud mental hacia el fortalecimiento de mecanismos protectores, no solo la corrección de daños.

Un nuevo estudio cuestiona la visión del carroñeo como un recurso primitivo de reserva para los primeros humanos, presentándolo en cambio como una estrategia de supervivencia inteligente y fiable que moldeó nuestra evolución. Liderado por el CENIEH de España, la investigación destaca cómo el consumo de carroña proporcionó nutrición esencial con menos esfuerzo que la caza. Rasgos humanos como el ácido gástrico fuerte y la movilidad a larga distancia hicieron del carroñeo particularmente efectivo.

Reportado por IA

Katie Wells, fundadora de Wellness Mama, comparte consejos prácticos para transformar los hogares en entornos calmantes que apoyen el sistema nervioso. Basándose en su experiencia personal e investigación, enfatiza cambios simples en luz, sonido y desorden para reducir el estrés. La guía, publicada el 13 de febrero de 2026, destaca cómo los elementos cotidianos del hogar influyen en la relajación y la salud.

Investigadores de la Universidad de Florida informan que factores de estilo de vida como el optimismo, el sueño de buena calidad y un fuerte apoyo social están relacionados con cerebros que parecen hasta ocho años más jóvenes de lo esperado para la edad de una persona. El efecto se observó incluso entre adultos que viven con dolor crónico, lo que subraya cómo los comportamientos cotidianos pueden influir en la salud cerebral con el tiempo.

Reportado por IA Verificado por hechos

Los investigadores han desarrollado un modelo de aprendizaje profundo que estima la carga de estrés crónico midiendo el volumen de la glándula adrenal en tomografías CT estándar, introduciendo lo que describen como el primer biomarcador basado en imágenes para el estrés crónico. La métrica, llamada Índice de Volumen Adrenal, está vinculada a la exposición al cortisol, el estrés percibido, la carga de estrés fisiológico general y el riesgo cardiovascular a largo plazo, según hallazgos que se presentarán en la reunión anual de la Radiological Society of North America.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar