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  • Cows, pigs, chickens, deer, rabbitsthese are  all animals that humans around the world regularly  

  • eat. But, for the most part, the animals we eat  don't eat animalsat least not only animals;  

  • humans basically only dine on herbivores and  omnivores. Why do we steer clear of carnivores

  • Hi, I'm Kate, and this is MinuteEarth. I'm a lover of carnivores and food, so when  

  • I sank my teeth into this question, I thoughtalready had a pretty good idea of what the answer  

  • was going to be. But there are actually several  really interesting possibilities out there about  

  • why we generally keep carnivores off the menu. The first reason we might avoid eating  

  • carnivoresand this was my go-to hypothesis  before this videois the safety, or really,  

  • the un-safety, of their meat. As animals  live their lives, they pick up potential  

  • nastiesthings like parasites, microbes, and  heavy metalssome of which can hang around in  

  • their bodies and cause harm. When one animal eats  another, it adds that animal's nasties to its own  

  • nasties. When that animal-eater eats another  animal, it'll ingest all that animal's nasties.  

  • And if something should eat the eater, it'll  nom up ALL those animals' nasties. The idea is  

  • that eating animals that eat lots of other animals  might expose us to more nastiesand that's not  

  • great. We do know that certain animal-eating  species do contain high enough levels of  

  • certain nasties that make them potentially  dangerous for certain humans to consume,  

  • but we don't have evidence that this problem  applies to humans eating carnivores in general

  • So let's move onto the second hypothesisdeliciousness; maybe animals that only eat  

  • other animals just don't taste all that goodAnd, because we're dealing with deliciousness,  

  • I'm gonna hop over into MinuteFood-land for  this one. Now, there are a few reasons why  

  • carnivore meat might not be particularly tastythe first is texture. Carnivores tend to be lean,  

  • mean hunting machinesthey have to be in order  to catch their prey. The leaner and stronger an  

  • animal is, the less juicy fat it contains and  the thicker its bundles of muscle fibers are,  

  • so the tougher its meat is likely to beand in  general, humans aren't big fans of tough meat.  

  • Then, there's flavor, because what an animal eats  can affect how it tastesthat's why some people  

  • care whether they're eating grass-fed or grain-fed  beef. Maybe something about eating lots of other  

  • animalslike the urea critters tend to containor the icky compounds produced when meat sits  

  • aroundmakes a carnivore's meat taste grossAnd there IS some anecdotal evidence for this;  

  • people who've eaten bear during different seasons  of the year tend to say that spring bearswhich  

  • have been gorging on berriesare way tastier  than fall bears, which have been feasting on fish.  

  • Speaking of fish though, there's a big exception  to this wholehumans don't eat carnivoresthing;  

  • several of the fish species we eat only eat other  animals, and they don't taste badquite the  

  • opposite, in fact. So I'd go so far as to  say that the taste hypothesis doesn't hold  

  • upat least not broadly across all carnivores. Let's go back to MinuteEarth-land to chat about  

  • the third hypothesis: inefficiency. At least in  modern times, producing enough meat to feed big  

  • groups of big, hungry humans has generally  required raising animals for their meat,  

  • and doing this with carnivores doesn't make that  much sense. There's the matter of them seeing us  

  • as food, but the bigger problem is that raising  carnivores is kind of a waste. If you feed, say,  

  • a cow 10,000 calories of grass, most of that  energy goes into keeping the cow aliveonly  

  • about ten percent of it goes into building body  mass. So from all this grass, you'll only end  

  • up with something like 1000 calories of beef –  that's basically just a couple steaks. And if you  

  • feed those 1000 calories of beef to, say, a tigeryou'll get only 100 calories of tiger meat. It's  

  • way more efficientand easierto just eat the  beef yourself! It's even more efficient to eat the  

  • plants yourself, but that's a whole other videoThis hypothesisinefficiencyis the only one  

  • that's actually supported by the weird fact that  we do eat carnivorous fish. The very same energy  

  • loss happens in the ocean too, but since we've  spent most of history just opportunistically  

  • catching fishrather than raising them ourselves  – inefficiency here hasn't really mattered to us

  • But there's still one more hypothesis for why  humans don't generally eat carnivores: religion.  

  • Judaism does not allow the eating of predatorsand the Quran bars eating animals with fangs or  

  • talonswhich discounts lots of animals that eat  only animals. It's not unusual for behaviors to  

  • start out as religious practices, then spread  outwards and become relatively commonplace;  

  • humans' avoidance of carnivores as a food source  may have followed a similar trajectory. Although  

  • note that it's possiblelikely, really –  that religious rules about eating carnivores  

  • are rooted in other reasons to avoid eating  these animals; for example, unsafetyor  

  • at least people's perceptions of unsafety –  could lead to these kinds of restrictions

  • Deliciousness, too, could be related to  the other hypotheses; like, if carnivore  

  • meat was risky to consume, it's likely that  we'd evolve a distaste for itjust like  

  • we've evolved to dislike bitter foods, many of  which contain potentially-dangerous compounds

  • In other wordsthis carnivorous culinary conundrum  iscomplicated. And since nobody out there is  

  • actually studying it, we don't have a solid  answer for why we gobble up cows and chickens,  

  • but steer clear of tigers and eagles. But  this question is good food for thought,  

  • and I, for one, have enjoyed  chewing on the possibilities.

  • Since we got on our carnivore kick, we've been  having a blast playing Beast Lord: The New Land,  

  • which sponsored this video. It's a basic  strategy game where you need to explore,  

  • find resources, and build alliances, but  with a cool ecological twist - which you  

  • know we love! You can choose from more than  500 animal characters to unlock and play as,  

  • each of which uses characteristic natural  behaviors to help the team. And let me just say:  

  • the art is amazing! We're big fans of the lion  character - which you can get once you log in  

  • for 2 days in a row. In this game, lions act like  squad captains - so when you put one in your team,  

  • it amps up the rest of the squad's expedition  skills. When the lion's leading the pack,  

  • its attack powers get boosted, too. And as  your lion gains experience, it increases the  

  • rest of the team's attack and defense skills  simultaneously, making the whole beast squad  

  • even more effective. So join more than 10 million  other folks who have downloaded the game, and  

  • start playing today - get started at the links in  the description. If you use the code MINUTEEARTH,  

  • they'll hook you up with a bunch of extra  resources right at the start. Thanks Beast Lord!

Cows, pigs, chickens, deer, rabbitsthese are  all animals that humans around the world regularly  

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