Fluctuating asymmetry, a marker of poor growth quality, is associated with adult male metabolic rate.
Daniel P LongmanSakura OyamaJames CracknellNathan ThompsonDan GordonJay T StockJonathan C K WellsPublished in: American journal of physical anthropology (2021)
The data suggest that low-quality asymmetrical growth is associated with later-life metabolic inefficiencies in males. Energetic investment in processes (likely concerning the stress-response) unrelated to growth during childhood may thereby trade-off against adult metabolic efficiency. We suggest that the presence of a relationship between RMR and FA in males but not females may be explained by the additional metabolic strain associated with larger body size and increased male muscularity, which may amplify the inefficiencies arising from low-quality growth.