The number of plant species which nourish humanity is remarkably limited. Most of the 195,000 species of flowering plants produce edible parts which could be utilized by man; however less than 0.1% or fewer than 300 species are used for food. Approximately 17 plant species provide 90% of mankind’s food supply, of which cereal grains supply far and away the greatest percentage. From table 1, it can be shown that the world’s four major cereal grains (wheat, maize, rice and barley) contribute more tonnage to humanity’s food supply than the next 26 crops combined. Eight cereal grains: wheat, maize, rice, barley, sorghum, oats, rye, and millet provide 56% of the food energy and 50% of the protein consumed on earth. Three cereals: wheat, maize and rice together comprise at least 75% of the world’s grain production. It is clear that humanity has become dependent upon cereal grains for the majority of its food supply. As Mangelsdorf has pointed out, ‘cereal grains literally stand between mankind and starvation’; therefore, it is essential that we fully understand the nutritional implications of cereal grain consumption upon human health and well being.
Modern man has become so dependent upon eating cereal grains (grass seeds) that it has prompted at least one author to say that we have become ‘canaries’. However, this has not always been the case. For the vast majority of mankind’s presence on this planet, he rarely if ever consumed cereal grains. With the exception of the last 10,000 years following the agricultural ‘revolution’, humans have existed as non-cereal-eating hunter-gatherers since the emergence of Homo erectus 1.7 million years ago. Although the first anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) appeared in Africa ?90,000 years ago, humans prior to the mesolithic period (~15,000 years ago) like other primates rarely if ever utilized cereal grains. Post-pleistocene (~10,000 years ago) hunter-gatherers occasionally consumed cereal grains; however these foods were apparently not major dietary components for most of the year. It is apparent that there is little or no evolutionary precedent in our species for grass seed consumption. Consequently, we have had little time (=500 generations) since the inception of the agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago to adapt to a food type which now represents humanity’s major source of both calories and protein.
The sum of evidence indicates that the human genetic constitution has changed little in the past 40,000 years. The foods which were commonly available to preagricultural man were the foods which shaped modern man’s genetic nutritional requirements. Although our genetically determined nutritional needs have changed little in the past 40,000 years, our diet has changed dramatically since the advent of agriculture 10,000 years ago. Cereal grains as a staple food are a relatively recent addition to the human diet and represent a dramatic departure from those foods to which we are genetically adapted. Discordance between humanity’s genetically determined dietary needs and his present day diet is responsible for many of the degenerative diseases which plague industrial man. Although cereal grains are associated with virtually every highly developed civilization in mankind’s history and now occupy the base of the present day food selection pyramid in the United States, there is a significant body of evidence which suggests that cereal grains are less than optimal foods for humans and that the human genetic makeup and physiology may not be fully adapted to high levels of cereal grain consumption.
Contents
Introduction
Archaeological Perspective
Dietary Imbalances of Cereal Grains
Vitamins A, C and Beta-Carotene
B Vitamins
Minerals
Essential Fatty Acids
Amino Acids
Antinutrients in Cereal Grains
Alkylresorcinols
Alpha-Amylase Inhibitors
Protease Inhibitors
Lectins
Autoimmune Diseases and Cereal Grain Consumption
Autoimmunity
Molecular Mimicry
Genetic and Anthropological Factors
Autoimmune Diseases Associated with Cereal Grain Consumption
Psychological and Neurological Illnesses Associated with Cereal Grain Consumption
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
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