Tag Page HumanAdaptation

#HumanAdaptation
Curiosity Corner

Breathless Heights and Endless Depths: How Humans Conquer Extremes Sherpas, native to the Himalayas, thrive above 10,000 feet, where oxygen levels are about 40% lower than at sea level, thanks to genetic adaptations. Variants in EPAS1 and EGLN1, created through mutations and natural selection over thousands of years, alter oxygen-sensing pathways, allowing efficient oxygen delivery without raising hemoglobin, keeping oxygen saturation near 93%. They have larger lungs (up to 20% bigger than lowlanders), higher capillary density, and strong cardiovascular systems, reducing fatigue and risk of altitude sickness. Daily exposure to steep terrain strengthens aerobic capacity, muscular endurance, and metabolic efficiency, enabling Sherpas to climb peaks above 26,000 feet while carrying loads over 100 pounds. Their closest relatives, the Tibetans, share these gene variants, showing thousands of years of adaptation to extreme hypoxia and high-altitude stress. Sherpas also display increased mitochondrial density, enhancing cellular energy production under low oxygen. Interestingly, the Andean highlanders, living at 10,000 to 14,000 feet in the Andes, roughly 7,000 to 8,000 miles away, survive using higher hemoglobin, larger lungs, and cardiovascular adaptations but lack Sherpas’ EPAS1 and EGLN1 variants. These differences illustrate convergent evolution, where separate populations develop distinct strategies to cope with chronic hypoxia. The Bajau people, who live at sea, have enlarged spleens that store oxygenated red blood cells and slower heart rates underwater, enabling dives up to 230 feet. Variants in PDE10A likely arose through mutations selected over generations to support oxygen storage. From a Darwinian perspective, Sherpas, Andeans, and Bajau show how natural selection fine-tunes human physiology, shaping oxygen use, endurance, and metabolic efficiency in extreme environments. #SurvivingExtremes #Science #Genetics #HumanAdaptation #Biology

You've reached the end!
Tag: HumanAdaptation | LocalAll