Humans and other primates burn 50 per cent fewer calories each day than other mammals, the study found.
Most mammals, like the family dog or pet hamster, live a fast-paced life, reaching adulthood in a matter of months, reproducing prodigiously, and dying in their teens if not before.
By comparison, humans and our primate relatives (apes, monkeys, tarsiers, lorises, and lemurs) have long childhoods, reproduce infrequently, and live exceptionally long lives.
Primates' slow pace of life has long puzzled biologists because the mechanisms underlying it were unknown.
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Using a safe and non-invasive technique known as "doubly labelled water," which tracks the body's production of carbon dioxide, the researchers measured the number of calories that primates burned over a 10 day period.
Combining these measurements with similar data from other studies, the team compared daily energy expenditure among primates to that of other mammals.
"Humans, chimpanzees, baboons, and other primates expend only half the calories we'd expect for a mammal," said Herman Pontzer, an anthropologist at Hunter College in New York and the lead author of the study.
This dramatic reduction in metabolic rate, previously unknown for primates, accounts for their slow pace of life. All organisms need energy to grow and reproduce, and energy expenditure can also contribute to ageing.
The slow rates of growth, reproduction, and ageing among primates match their slow rate of energy expenditure, indicating that evolution has acted on metabolic rate to shape primates' distinctly slow lives.
Researchers also found that primates in zoos expend as much energy as those in the wild, suggesting that physical activity may have less of an impact on daily energy expenditure than is often thought.
The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.