食品与生物工程学院学术报告暨研究生学术论坛——The Drunken Monkey: Is Alcohol Consumption in Modern Humans An Evolutionary Hangover?
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发布人:熊华  发布时间:2025-06-25   动态浏览次数:12

报告The Drunken Monkey: Is Alcohol Consumption in Modern Humans An Evolutionary Hangover?

主讲人 Prof. Robert Dudley

报告 202562715:20

报告 西华大学招就处报告厅401

主办单位:西华大学食品与生物工程学院、西华大学航空航天学院

主讲人简介

Robert Dudley is a Professor in the Department of Integrative Biology at the University of CaliforniaBerkeley, and a Research Associate at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. He received a B.S. in Zoology in 1983 from Duke University, and a Ph.D. in Zoology in 1987 from the University of Cambridge where he was a Marshall Scholar. From 19871992, Robert was a postdoctoral fellow with the Smithsonian Institution, working in Panama at the Barro Colorado Island field station. Following appointments at the University of Texas at Austin from 19922002, he moved to Berkeley in 2003 where he has held multiple endowed chairs, and also served from 20162021 as Chair of the Department of Integrative Biology. Robert's research is primarily concerned with the evolution, physiology, and biomechanics of flight in insects and hummingbirds. To date, he has published more than 160 research articles and two books in the general fields of biomechanics and comparative physiology.  His current research projects focus on the origins of flight in both birds and insects, and on the amazing flight performance of hummingbirds, a species-rich avian group which exemplifies up-regulated aerodynamic and physiological capacity.  Both his study of animal flight origins and of hummingbirds have involved engineering approaches (e.g., robotic designs, particle-imaging velocimetry, and highspeed 3D kinematic reconstructions), and have provided new insights into potential design of microair vehicles. These laboratory studies of flight biomechanics have been complemented by fieldwork to evaluate high-altitude adaptations of volant taxa (e.g., extreme flight performance of bumblebees in the mountains of western Sichuan), comparisons of hummingbirds with the Old World nectarivorous sunbirds, the ecophysiology of long-distance migration in butterflies, and controlled flight behavior in wingless hexapods of the tropical rainforest canopy.

内容简介:

Ethanol derives from the fermentation of simple sugars, and fermentative yeasts are ubiquitous within terrestrial ecosystems. Animals that consume sugar-rich fruits and nectar thus routinely ingest low-level ethanol; the positive psychoactive responses to ethanol among vertebrate fruit-eaters (and modern humans) act to increase net caloric gain during feeding via the aperitif effect. Early primates (and more recently the great apes) predominantly consumed ripe fruit, suggesting chronic exposure to fermented carbohydrates along with natural selection for the rapid localization and consumption of these calorically rich substrates. Patterns of alcohol use by modern humans may thus reflect ancestral sensory biases associating ethanol consumption with nutritional reward (i.e., the drunken monkey hypothesis).