In this paper we discuss the hypothesis, proposed by some authors, that man is a habitual meat-eater. Gut measurements of
primate species do not support the contention that human digestive tract is specialized for meat-eating, especially when taking
into account allometric factors and their variations between folivores, frugivores and meat-eaters. The dietary status of
the human species is that of an unspecialised frugivore, having a flexible diet that includes seeds and meat (omnivorous diet).
Throughout the various time periods, our human ancestors could have mostly consumed either vegetable, or large amounts of
animal matter (with fat and/or carbohydrates as a supplement), depending on the availability and nutrient content of food
resources. Some formerly adaptive traits (e.g. the “thrifty genotype”) could have resulted from selective pressure during
transitory variations of feeding behaviour linked to environmental constraints existing in the past.
Key words meat eating - hominids - gut allometry - thrifty genotype