Scientists Detect ‘Shocking’ Drop in Male Fertility

I’m amazed the word climate change isn’t in this article.

The homes we live in and the food we eat might contain chemicals that reduce male fertility – and that goes for both men and their dogs, new research suggests.

Recently, experts have grown ever more worried by what appears to be a ‘shocking‘ drop in human male fertility.

According to the team behind the latest research, some studies show that in the past 80 years alone, there has been a 50 percent global reduction in sperm quality, and no one can figure out why this is happening.

Then, we looked at dogs – and this could be an important clue. In 2016, a team at the University of Nottingham found that sperm quality had also taken a plummet in domestic dogs over the course of several decades.

Unlike the research on humans, this time the scientists could trace back the sperm quality decrease to dangerous chemicals in the dogs’ environment and food.

The results had the team curious: did this mean there was something in the shared environment of dogs and people that was to blame?

Their new research certainly suggests this might be the case. Specifically, the team identified two human-made chemicals, commonly found in homes and diets, that had the same adverse effects on both human sperm and dog sperm.

“This new study supports our theory that the domestic dog is indeed a ‘sentinel’ or mirror for human male reproductive decline,” says Richard Lea, a reproductive biologist at the University of Nottingham.

Using sperm samples from 11 men and 9 dogs in the same region, the researchers tested the effects of two human-made chemicals. One was the common plasticiser DEHP, which is commonly found in carpets, flooring, clothes and toys, and which can leach into our food and drink.

The other is polychlorinated biphenyl 153 (PB153), which belongs to a group of industrial chemicals found to be persistent organic pollutants in the 1960s and 70s.

Using the sperm samples and these two chemicals at concentration levels that are commonly found in our current environments, the researchers carried out identical experiments for the men and the dogs. In both subjects and with both chemicals, the effect was reduced sperm motility and increased fragmentation of DNA.

Read the rest here

2 thoughts on “Scientists Detect ‘Shocking’ Drop in Male Fertility

  1. But that story was out back in November, “Sperm don’t like heat, so climate change could damage male fertility, study says.” USA TODAY Nov. 13, 2018. https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/science/2018/11/13/climate-change-could-damage-sperm-and-thus-male-fertility/1990220002/

    This would suggest that every man who moved from the Northern part of the US to the South – say from Maine to Florida where the average daily temperature is 30F hotter, immediately became sterile.

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