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High rates of human infertility may have evolutionary cause

By | September 10, 2009, 9:16 AM PDT

About 10 percent of couples hoping for a baby have fertility problems.

Is pollution to blame? Stress? Eating habits?

Biologist Oren Hasson of Tel Aviv University thinks it’s evolution, baby.

In a new study published in Biological Reviews, Hasson writes that the reproductive organs of men and women are in an evolutionary arms race that’s far from over.

“The rate of human infertility is higher than we should expect it to be,” Hasson said in a statement. “By now, evolution should have improved our reproductive success rate. Something else is going on.”

Combining empirical evidence with a mathematical model developed with colleague Lewi Stone, the researchers suggest that the bodies of men and women have become reproductive antagonists, rather than partners.

They insist that women’s bodies, over thousands of years of evolution, have forced sperm to become more competitive by rewarding the strongest, fastest sperm cells with penetration of the egg — and thus fertilization.

In evolutionary response, men are overproducing “aggressive” sperm to increase chances of successful fertilization, the scientists say.

The problem? That aggression may be terminating the pregnancy before it starts.

It’s all about timing: the first sperm to enter and bind with the egg triggers a series of biochemical responses to block other sperm from entering — necessary because a second penetrating sperm would kill the egg.

But in the few minutes it takes for that blockade to complete, today’s aggressive sperm may manage to penetrate the egg — terminating fertilization just after it’s begun.

“It’s a delicate balance, and over time women’s and men’s bodies fine tune to each other. Sometimes, during the fine-tuning process, high rates of infertility can be seen. That’s probably the reason for the very high rates of unexplained infertility in the last decades.”

To avoid the fatal consequences of this “polyspermy,” the female reproductive path has evolved to become less hospitable to male sperm, by “ejecting, diluting, diverting and killing” spermatozoa before they ever reach the egg.

Thus, a male-female fertility arms race, fueled by evolution and merely aggravated by factors such as stress and pollution.

(For the psychological side of infertility, read the touching “Life After Infertility Treatments Fail.“)

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: High rates of human infertility may have evolutionary cause
A very simplistic view of the problem. Besides a lot of the 'aggressiveness' can be attributed to altered immune function due to sharp increase in food intolerances and allergies we are seeing in the world. On top of that the article completely ignores the leading causative factors of the decline in fertility such as: environmental pollution, pesticides, bisphenols in plastic, endocrine disruptors, heavy metals and host of other drugs and chemicals found in everyday products, food and tap water. The problem is that since the industrial revolution millions of new and untested chemicals have been released into the environment, and only now we are starting to see the real impact - decline is animal and plant species, extermination of certain species and a dangerous decline in human and animal fertility. Luckily environmentally induced infertility is reversible and can be treated naturally. Iva Keene - Natural Fertility Specialist and Naturopath. For more info see www.natural-fertility-prescription.com
Posted by ivakeene
10th Sep 2009
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That and incompatible matches, exacerbated by invetro kids
Fertility drugs and procedures are creating more and more people who could have
never been born through natural causes - genetically incompatible yet fused together
by force.

On a side note, it looks like smartplanet needs to fix the line wrap code for this comment
cgi.
Posted by Hobyx
11th Sep 2009
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RE: High rates of human infertility may have evolutionary cause
It's ironic that drugs, pesticides, and other pollutants are what caused the problem in the first place, now we're looking for drugs and procedures to counteract these problems. We should strive to remove all these poisons from our lives - not blame it on somebody's misguided theory of evolution (which, by the way, will never be proven).
Posted by scott@...
15th Sep 2009
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RE: High rates of human infertility may have evolutionary cause
Yah, right. Blame it on the men. That seems to be the trend today.
Posted by StHeretic
15th Sep 2009
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There are simpler explanations
The best theory is the simplest. This theory fails that axiom.

The genetic quality of mankind has been going downhill ever since our species existed, and the rate of change from generation to generation can actually be measured. As a species we have now accumulated so many defects that we are at a precipise; namely, there will be a radical rise in the rate of spontaneous miscarriages within the new few generations. Currently it is around 15% of all conceptions.

The 'infertile' couples are conceiving, but the resulting fetus has a common fatal defect from each parent, dooming it before the mother can actually realizes she is pregnant. This rate will increase in the future, just has it has already increased from the past.
Posted by LarryPTL
15th Sep 2009
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RE: High rates of human infertility may have evolutionary cause
This could be the best thing for the future human race. The planet is overpopulated with massive pollution (produced by too many humans) and the only valid solution is a serious reduction in population. Forget about the "right to have children". No-one has a right to threaten the future of the human race by excessive breeding. The other factor that will seriously reduce the human population is the exhausting of oil resources. Unfortunately this will cause major suffering as millions starve because our food production system is almost entirely oil based. We need to start going back to traditional farming methods using animal power before it's too late.
Posted by john.foggitt@...
16th Sep 2009
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RE: High rates of human infertility may have evolutionary cause
I agree with the professional (as opposed to theoretical) explanation from ivakeene (1st comment). What I know from male infertility is that it depends on the quantity and quality of sperm production, which had declined very much in the countries traditionally considered as most "developed" (measured by money, not social indicators). The finnish (from Finland) and their nordic neighbours had some of the best rates, associated with a less contamined environment, and a society a little more oriented to wellness than to pure wealth.

Besides, the intricate and complex design involved in the reproduction process, makes me believe "evolution" should be redefined as something inherent to high order systems, but not as an explanation of how the high order systems came to existence.
Posted by Walter Griebenow Massone
22nd Sep 2009
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