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very disadvantages to a carnivore to have jaws like ours. Herbivores chew food to disrupt
plant cell walls for better digestion and to mix it with saliva, because unlike carnivores,
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  • 00:04

    Hi, this is Dr. Sofia Pineda Ochoa with Meat Your Future. Are humans

  • 00:10

    herbivores, carnivores or omnivores? It's very important for a given animal to eat what

  • 00:16

    they are physiologically and anatomically designed to eat, to improve the chances of

  • 00:23

    survival and health. So, what are humans designed to eat? When looking at a

  • 00:28

    species to determine what they are in terms of carnivore, omnivore or herbivore, we can

  • 00:34

    look at their behavior or we can look their biology. From a behavioral

  • 00:39

    standpoint, humans behave as omnivores because we observe many humans in their behavior eating

  • 00:46

    a wide variety of both animal and plant-based foods. Biologically, however, from

  • 00:53

    a physiologic and anatomic standpoint, it's a different story.

  • 00:58

    Dr. William C. Roberts from the National Institutes of Health and Baylor

  • 01:02

    University — who is the editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Cardiology and one

  • 01:08

    of the most prominent cardiologists in the world, with over 1,500 publications

  • 01:14

    in peer-reviewed medical journals — summarized our answer very nicely. He wrote:

  • 01:21

    “Although most of conduct our lives as omnivores, in that we eat flesh

  • 01:25

    as well as vegetables and fruits, human beings have characteristics of

  • 01:31

    herbivores, not carnivores. The appendages of carnivores are claws; those of herbivores

  • 01:38

    are hands or hooves. The teeth of carnivores are sharp; those of herbivores are mainly flat (for grinding).

  • 01:46

    The intestinal tract of carnivores is short (3 times body length); that of herbivores is

  • 01:52

    long (12 times body length). Body cooling of carnivores is done by panting;

  • 01:58

    herbivores, by sweating. Carnivores drink

  • 02:02

    fluids by lapping; herbivores by sipping Carnivores produce their own vitamin C,

  • 02:06

    whereas herbivores obtain it from their diet

  • 02:10

    Thus, humans have characteristics of herbivores, not carnivores."

  • 02:15

    That's right.

  • 02:16

    Humans have characteristics of herbivores, not carnivores or omnivores — because omnivores,

  • 02:22

    like bears raccoons, actually retain most of the carnivorous

  • 02:26

    characteristics, so that they are still able to digest and hunt their prey, and do so

  • 02:33

    effectively. Although we behave like omnivores, our digestive system actually resembles

  • 02:39

    that of the chimpanzees and other great apes, who eat mostly plants. The percentage of

  • 02:46

    animal foods that chimpanzees do eat is very low, if any, about 2 to 3%

  • 02:53

    and mainly termites and other insects. Regarding the gastrointestinal system --

  • 02:58

    humans, like herbivores, have a relatively smaller opening of the oral cavity

  • 03:03

    compared to the head size. Carnivores have a wide mouth in relation to the head size, and their

  • 03:10

    jaw joint is a hinge joint, very strong and stable lying in the same plane as the teeth; the

  • 03:16

    lower jaw of a carnivore doesn't move forward and there's very limited side-to-side

  • 03:21

    motion. Like herbivores, our jaw joint is positioned above the level of the teeth, and because it

  • 03:27

    has an expanded angle, the lower jaw has more sideways motion and more lateral and

  • 03:32

    complex motion for chewing plant foods. Our jaw joints are less stable and strong

  • 03:39

    than those of carnivores therefore, and could be easily dislocated if we

  • 03:44

    actually tried to prey on an animal. On the other hand,

  • 03:47

    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

  • 03:57

    very disadvantages to a carnivore to have jaws like ours. Herbivores chew food to disrupt

  • 04:05

    plant cell walls for better digestion and to mix it with saliva, because unlike carnivores,

  • 04:12

    who mostly swallow the food without chewing and mixing it with saliva, herbivores and humans

  • 04:17

    have saliva that contains digestive enzymes. So, our digestion starts in the chewing process.

  • 04:26

    The saliva of carnivorous animals does not contain any enzymes for digestion.

  • 04:32

    Teeth are strikingly different as well.

  • 04:36

    Our canines are flattened, blunt and small, shaped like a spade and non-serrated; unlike

  • 04:41

    carnivores, who have them elongated and dagger-like, which are often serrated for killing and

  • 04:46

    tearing their pray. Our molars and premolars are squared and flattened for grinding and crushing;

  • 04:52

    unlike carnivores, who have them sharp, jagged and shaped like a blade.

  • 04:58

    If we humans tried to kill a giraffe, for example, with our teeth,

  • 05:02

    we’d sooner get kicked by the animal. Or, if we successfully snuck-up and

  • 05:07

    actually tried to really bite into the live animal, it could could easily result in

  • 05:12

    some of our teeth falling out or our jaw dislocating. We would for sure end up

  • 05:18

    with a very annoyed giraffe, but not a dead one to prey upon. And on to the stomach. Our stomach

  • 05:25

    volume is, like herbivores, about 25% of our gastrointestinal tract; unlike carnivores,

  • 05:31

    who have a very large stomach volume with twice as much capacity, about 60 to

  • 05:36

    70% of their total G.I. tract volume, which allows them to kill maybe once a

  • 05:42

    week, gorge on large amounts of meat, and digest later.

  • 05:47

    The pH of our stomach is about 4 to 5, with food;

  • 05:51

    unlike carnivores who secrete a lot more hydrochloric acid

  • 05:54

    and have a stomach pH that is a lot more acidic (their pH is usually one or less,

  • 06:01

    with food). The more acidic stomach of a carnivore is advantageous to kill bacteria found in

  • 06:08

    decaying flesh. As Dr. Roberts mentioned, humans, like herbivores, have a very long small intestine,

  • 06:14

    about 10 times the length of our body; unlike the intestines in carnivorous animals, which are

  • 06:20

    short, only about 3 to 5 times their body length. The long intestines in

  • 06:26

    humans and herbivores is necessary for the fibers in plants, which require

  • 06:31

    longer and more elaborate guts, sometimes even sacculated like the human gut.

  • 06:37

    And, there are some striking physiologic differences as well. Just like other herbivores,

  • 06:43

    humans require vitamin C from plants. If we don’t eat vitamin C, we get a disease

  • 06:50

    called scurvy where we are unable to make collagen, which is

  • 06:54

    the building substance of mostly everything in our body (so, lack of vitamin C can

  • 07:00

    result in problems in our bones, bleeding gums, problems with healing, etc.).

  • 07:07

    And vitamin C is found exclusively in plants. Mammals that are primarily carnivorous do

  • 07:15

    not need to eat vitamin C from their diets. They make their own vitamin C. Also, vitamin A

  • 07:21

    is telling. There are two types of vitamin A: (1) preformed vitamin A, like retinol, found in animal

  • 07:27

    products like meat, liver, dairy products, eggs and fish; and (2) pro-vitamin A,

  • 07:32

    carotenoids, found in plant foods. The form of vitamin A that comes from

  • 07:37

    animals can be toxic to humans in large quantities. The livers of animals that

  • 07:43

    are primarily carnivorous have the capacity to detoxify vitamin A.

  • 07:48

    However, our livers are unable to do this. In this paper published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,

  • 07:57

    scientists expressed concern that excess of the vitamin A that comes from animals is

  • 08:03

    not always identified and can cause serious problems. They say, “excessive

  • 08:09

    vitamin A intake may be a growing but underappreciated problem.” And apparently

  • 08:14

    this problem is nothing new. The scientists reported that: “Fossilized skeletal

  • 08:19

    remains of early humans suggest that bone abnormalities may

  • 08:23

    have been caused by hypervitaminosis A [which means excess of vitamin A]. From these

  • 08:29

    and other reports, vitamin A toxicity is known to be an ancient phenomenon.”

  • 08:36

    So, it looks like have been behavior omnivores for quite some time now, notwithstanding our biology.

  • 08:44

    The last thing I want to point out is actually a very sad thing. A characteristic that is unique to

  • 08:50

    herbivores and not in carnivores, and it’s a problem in humans. It’s something that

  • 08:55

    Dr. Roberts pointed out as well: “Atherosclerosis affects only herbivores.

  • 09:01

    Dogs, cats, tigers, and lions can be saturated with fat and cholesterol,

  • 09:05

    and atherosclerotic plaques do not develop.”

  • 09:10

    That's right. Carnivores and omnivores — animals who are designed to eat other animals — can eat all the

  • 09:18

    animals and animal products they want and they never develop atherosclerosis,

  • 09:23

    which are plaques of cholesterol coating our vessels that can occlude the blood flow that goes

  • 09:31

    to our heart and brain [and] cause heart attacks and strokes. Cholesterol in our

  • 09:36

    diet is only present in animal products, and we don't need to consume any of it,

  • 09:42

    because our body synthesizes already all of the cholesterol that we need for all of our biologic needs.

  • 09:48

    Animals that are not designed to eat meat, like herbivores, including humans, do develop atherosclerosis. We do develop

  • 09:58

    this problematic coating of cholesterol in our arteries, and we do it big time. Atherosclerosis is ubiquitous on

  • 10:06

    a Western diet with animal products since very early in our lives. We really do end up

  • 10:12

    paying a price for behaving like omnivores, when we are biologically designed as herbivores.

  • 10:19

    Thanks you very much.

All

The example sentences of CARNIVORES in videos (15 in total of 28)

they personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present called verb, past participle herbivores proper noun, singular honey noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction they personal pronoun don verb, non-3rd person singular present t proper noun, singular eat verb, non-3rd person singular present meat noun, singular or mass like preposition or subordinating conjunction us personal pronoun carnivores verb, 3rd person singular present do verb, non-3rd person singular present .
plant noun, singular or mass cell noun, singular or mass walls noun, plural for preposition or subordinating conjunction better adjective, comparative digestion noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction to to mix verb, base form it personal pronoun with preposition or subordinating conjunction saliva noun, singular or mass , because preposition or subordinating conjunction unlike preposition or subordinating conjunction carnivores noun, plural ,
amphibians noun, plural is verb, 3rd person singular present they personal pronoun re noun, singular or mass true adjective carnivores noun, plural proper noun, singular large adjective enough adverb to to eat verb, base form small adjective mammals noun, plural instead adverb of preposition or subordinating conjunction just adverb
niche noun, singular or mass not adverb unlike preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner hippopotamus noun, singular or mass proper noun, singular if preposition or subordinating conjunction hippos noun, plural were verb, past tense carnivores noun, plural and coordinating conjunction could modal fly verb, base form and coordinating conjunction breathe verb, base form
the determiner tiger noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner largest adjective, superlative of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner cats noun, plural and coordinating conjunction the determiner third adjective largest adjective, superlative of preposition or subordinating conjunction all determiner carnivores noun, plural .
lots noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction meat noun, singular or mass so preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle to to be verb, base form great adjective for preposition or subordinating conjunction all determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun carnivores verb, 3rd person singular present out preposition or subordinating conjunction there existential there
of preposition or subordinating conjunction apex noun, singular or mass predator noun, singular or mass , but coordinating conjunction these determiner much adverb smaller adjective, comparative carnivores noun, plural couldn proper noun, singular t proper noun, singular hunt noun, singular or mass the determiner larger adjective, comparative whales noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction megalodon proper noun, singular
some determiner believe verb, non-3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction these determiner bears verb, 3rd person singular present were verb, past tense hyper noun, singular or mass carnivores noun, plural devouring verb, gerund or present participle up preposition or subordinating conjunction to to 35 cardinal number pounds noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction flesh noun, singular or mass
the determiner carnivores noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction cats noun, plural have verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner smallest adjective, superlative or coordinating conjunction shortest adjective, superlative in preposition or subordinating conjunction length noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner small adjective intestine noun, singular or mass ,
part proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction what wh-pronoun makes verb, 3rd person singular present lion noun, singular or mass society noun, singular or mass so adverb fascinating adjective is verb, 3rd person singular present , unlike preposition or subordinating conjunction other adjective carnivores noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction chimpanzees noun, plural or coordinating conjunction
moved verb, past tense in preposition or subordinating conjunction , like preposition or subordinating conjunction true adjective carnivores noun, plural , and coordinating conjunction artiodactyls noun, plural proper noun, singular the determiner group noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction ungulates noun, plural that wh-determiner includes verb, 3rd person singular present animals noun, plural
so preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner assumption noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction neanderthals proper noun, singular were verb, past tense big adjective time noun, singular or mass carnivores noun, plural , relying verb, gerund or present participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction meat noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction fat adjective
it personal pronoun looked verb, past tense at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner number noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction different adjective mutations noun, plural per preposition or subordinating conjunction gene noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction pandas noun, plural and coordinating conjunction other adjective carnivores noun, plural .
and coordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun decline noun, singular or mass meant verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner large adjective carnivores noun, plural , like preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner tyrannosaurs noun, plural , were verb, past tense doomed verb, past participle as adverb well adverb .
that wh-determiner 's verb, 3rd person singular present why wh-adverb i personal pronoun think verb, non-3rd person singular present . . . i personal pronoun think verb, non-3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun should modal be verb, base form non verb, base form - carnivores noun, plural .

Use "carnivores" in a sentence | "carnivores" example sentences

How to use "carnivores" in a sentence?

  • A liberal society cannot be defended by herbivores. We need carnivores to save us, but we had better make sure the meat-eaters hunt only on our orders.
    -Michael Ignatieff-
  • You stupefied me. We waxed, Carnivores, late and alight In the beaded winter. All was ominous, luminous.
    -John Ashbery-
  • I think the evidence is pretty clear. If you look at various characteristics of carnivores versus herbivores, it doesn't take a genius to see where humans line up.
    -William C. Roberts-
  • For the most part, we carnivores do not eat other carnivores. We prefer to eat our vegetarian friends.
    -Robert Breault-

Definition and meaning of CARNIVORES

What does "carnivores mean?"

/ˈkärnəˌvôr/

noun
animal that feeds on other animals.
other
Any creature that consumes meat.