HEALTH UPDATE: taste for meat and fish inherited

19 Jun, 2006

Children inherit their taste for meat and fish but when it comes to vegetables and desserts it's more nurture than nature, according to a study on June 14.
Scientists who compared the food preferences of identical and fraternal twins found that some tastes are inherited while others are acquired.
"This is the first study to include significant numbers of protein foods and the first to show a high heritability for these," said Professor Jane Wardle of the charity Cancer Research UK.
Mothers of 103 pairs of four and five-year-old identical twins and 111 pairs of non-identical twins were given lists of 77 foods in different categories and told to rate how much their children liked them.
Identical twins share all the same genes while fraternal twins share only half, so comparing their food preferences highlights which tastes are inherited and which are influenced by environmental factors.
The researchers said it is not clear which factors influence a taste for fruits, vegetables or desserts, they suggested availability or the influence of parents could play a part.

Read Comments