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[dupe] An Alarming Decline in Sperm Quality Could Threaten the Future of the Human Race (gq.com)
47 points by fortran77 on March 29, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 69 comments


Falling sperm counts, declining egg quality, and endocrine disruptors - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26221925 - Feb 2021 (601 comments)

Falling sperm counts could threaten the human race - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26275527 - Feb 2021 (28 comments)

Male genitals are shrinking because of phthalates, warns Dr Shanna Swan - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26584347 - March 2021 (27 comments)


I saw the Netflix seaspiracy documentary last night, and it made me think there's really no way to sustain such a huge human population. Every single method of food production seems unsustainable to me, it either uses too much water or land, or produces too much greenhouse gas.

Personally I'd much prefer us to lower the population through infertility rather than famine and war.


You can feed yourself off of one acre, with primitive tools and basic agricultural practices. There are 1.9 Billion acres in the USA alone. With modern agricultural technology and power of scale, the resources in the ocean, you can feed a lot of people. This site has statistics showing that despite the population increase, the total amount of acres of farmed farm land has decreased in the last 20 years in the USA. Its about 900 million.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/196104/total-area-of-lan...


> There are 1.9 Billion acres in the USA alone.

Not all acres are equal. Not even within the same state; an acre in California's Central Valley is very different from an acre in California's Mojave Desert.

And further, this presupposes that there is adequate water for all those acres, which - as Californian farmers have learned over the last couple decades - ain't quite true. Some acres therefore have to remain unused in order for the other acres to remain usable.


Worth considering redundancy in that as well. It’s very easy to end up with serious problems if we have even a single failed crop in one season.


I guess that problem will eventually solve itself though?

It may leave society in tatters, but some people would survive.


Correct. But it’s not going to be pretty.


A big part of the problem honestly is that a lot of the arable land is being used to raise crops for meat production rather than direct human consumption. If the population shifted to a vegetable-heavy, meat-light diet it would be much easier to feed people with less land.


Not much we can do about land use. Regenerative agriculture practices use less water and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Im not sure about long term but switching from traditional to regenerative practices is carbon negative as soil organic matter and soil life is built up.


I saw that Netflix documentary "Kiss the Ground" which kind of claimed the same.

I hope it's true, I didn't do much further research on it, but it gives me some hope that we can fight climate change and be more robust against crop failure at the same time.


> Personally I'd much prefer us to lower the population through infertility rather than famine and war.

There is no reason to assume there is binary choice there.

Also the infertility crisis only affects developed countries, whose birth rates were already low. Under developed countries , whose populations have been booming and already outnumber developed countries are not affected by this crisis.


> Every single method of food production seems unsustainable to me

I don't agree. Look at the statistics on food waste, resource consumption of meat production, energy consumption in developed countries in general,... We are using farmland to produce fuel...

Food production could be much more sustainable if we wanted. We are very far away from an efficient usage of the available resources. Current methods of food production look unsustainable because we are not even trying.

Edit: Just to give you a number: In 2010, the postharvest food loss was estimated to be 1250 kcal per capita per day in the US.


These days, the last remaining rulers of the world would be able to engage in a war with robots only - from their bunkers.

In 2050 the robotization of the military will likely be even more pronounced.

For the first time in history, the capacity to wage war does not directly depend on having a large count of young men at your disposal. This is likely to change the entire balance.


„No weapon has ever been frightful enough to put a stop to war —perhaps because we never before had any that fought for themselves!“

Philip K. Dick. „The Defenders.“


The social implications of this would not be pretty. Without young people in society, the purpose of tomorrow would slowly fade. No point trying to build a future if there isn’t someone to take helm of it. Children of men did an excellent dramatization of this


children of men is about no more children.

It's a bit of a jump from less children.


True, but you can already see some effect in greying democratic states in Europe.

A lot of the political attention is focused on the interests of the most numerous voter class - the pensioners - and much less on the interests of the young. Carbon emissions are the only major exception I can think of.


Everyone can have one child and the population will still decline from premature deaths.


Quite possible to sustain present levels of population on vegan diet. This is NOT counting other sources of consumption we routinely indulge in.


I wonder what the resource usage of giving everyone a diet of something like soylent for most meals. I have found the Australian clone of it to be perfectly tolerable and cheaper. Especially if you think about it as saving money so you can go get something nicer at a restaurant later.


>seems unsustainable to me

Do you have a particularly well-developed or reliable intuition for the sustainability of food production? How did you come by it?


That’s why humans of the future will eat those weird bacteria that you find in places like volcanoes, the bottom of the ocean, or acidic caves. Gruel will be a wet, raw clump of it, and we’ll call it “Beyond Bugs”, because bug eating is an unsustainable luxury.


The evidence behind the decline is still controversial. Even if their is a decline in some groups, the WHO suggests levels of sperm are still in the normal range.

https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article/info%3Adoi%2F...

> Although there were no statistically significant changes in the prevalence of infertility in most regions amongst women who were exposed to the risk of pregnancy, reduced child-seeking behavior resulted in a reduction of primary infertility among all women.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3253726/

> Since 1980, the fertility rate for men in their 30s has increased by 21% and for men aged 40 years and older, the rate has increased nearly 30%. In contrast, the fertility rate in men younger than age 30 years has decreased by 15%.

https://academic.oup.com/humrep/article/33/6/998/4967751?log...

> Exposure to maternal smoking was associated with lower sperm counts but no overall increase in sperm counts was observed during the study period despite a decrease in this exposure.

Meta-analyses suggest a continuous decline in semen quality but few studies have investigated temporal trends in unselected populations recruited and analysed with the same protocol over a long period and none have studied simultaneous trends in lifestyle factors.


Sounds like the worst offender is plastics. There was another post recently about this same chemical affecting other biological processes. Perhaps a controversial thing to say, but maybe plastics could be some amount responsible for gender dysphoria.

It sounds like heated up plastics are the most dangerous, so those plastic takeaway tubs for food would be a prime target to remove. On the plus side, the local government where I am has been cracking down on single use plastics for environmental reasons which has majorly limited the amount of plastic that comes in contact with my food


>It sounds like heated up plastics are the most dangerous, so those plastic takeaway tubs for food would be a prime target to remove.

Cue the pandemic and everybody ordering takeout, because restaurants are closed.

My parents always taught me to be careful with plastic packaging and especially heating up things in the microwave in plastic containers.

I was at a friend's place and I saw them reheating rice in a plastic tub, which for me was appalling. I lost appetite right then and there.

I only buy glass tupperware for home use (the lid is plastic, but i just leave it out).

Also I avoid using plastic bottles. Glass is usually an alternative.

Thinking with new evidence that my parents had the right intuition here. With food we really should move to guilty until proven innocent.


And, hmmm, everyone (by which I mean I) thought there’d be a baby boom nine months after covid kicked in.

Instead, there have been a lot fewer babies being made.

It’s the things that make you go hmmm.


Alex Jones was (perhaps unintentionally) correct.


The article also includes fertility problem with women. These may actually be even larger because women have a shorter window of opportunity to have children. Get a careers and start having kids in your 30s? For many, it's too late. For some reason we never tell women that.


> For some reason we never tell women that.

This is just not true. If you are a woman, it is told to you over and over and over and over again. And women do occasionally talk about it when they talk with each other. Women even know that with age the risks are higher! Shocking, I know.

Also, average age of first birth in united states is 26.9 years old.

Yet also, those who have kids soon suffer lifetime consequences.


People may mention this, depending on your location, but as a society, no.


As a society, it is mentioned all the time. By pundits for political or cultural war reasons. Or inside articles about family. Or in articles about women health, or babies conception. In discussion about demographics. In discussion forums like this. It is talked about casually whenever any surrounding topic is talked about. Even reddit threads about relationship problems have that mentioned often. It is just not a secret.

If you never cared about family planning or female health, you never seen it. Arstechnika, the verge or gamera sites never writes about that. But it is not society not taking about it.


The US makes it very difficult on women who choose to have children. Maybe if we provided more support (financially, logistically, hell emotionally) they’d be more apt to have kids earlier. For my wife and I, we weighed the pros and cons and it was clear it was a bad move for us, so we passed.


> Maybe if we provided more support (financially, logistically, hell emotionally) they’d be more apt to have kids earlier.

The opposite seems to be true; the more support is available, the longer people try to put off childbearing.


This is the case in all of the western world. We push women in the direction of careers and never mention the consequences.

At the same time, while in some ways people are rich these days, we can't seem to find the time or money to have kids. That's not much of a choice. It's more that people react their to circumstances. If anything it's a form of "ethical" birth control.


Whole your theory is based on assumption that women are clueless. Meanwhile, you don't seem to care about cost of various choices to them.

Of course, admitting that maybe women do know all of that and decide to not have kids anyway would be too difficult.


We'll just have to try harder! As usual, all us males are willing to do the hard work. Imagine making love to the "Song of the Volga Boatmen":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfsWoNpHg2s

"Heave Ho, Boys!"


> As usual, all us males are willing to do the hard work.

You reminded me of an article about the major high-altitude adaptations of the world. There are three; one set occurring in Ethiopia, one in the Himalayas, and one in the Andes. The Andean suite of adaptations is much more evolutionarily recent, and, as you might expect, is of lower quality.

So the article covered that basic framework and then opined that, if you were the government of Peru, one obvious way to improve local health and productivity would be to introduce Tibetan DNA into the local gene pool.

"Some young Tibetan men could probably even be persuaded to volunteer for this important work."


》There was a pesticide used in the harvesting of pineapple; it’s called dibromochloropropane. [Better known as DBCP, it was banned from use in the U.S. in 1979.] That pesticide actually totally wiped out men’s sperm. Women were comparing notes, and they were saying that they couldn't get pregnant—the wives of these men. They tested the men, and they had zero sperm. And you can’t get more dramatic than that. But what they found was that when they stopped using the product, in a couple of months, their sperm count returned.

Maybe it could be used as a contraceptive.

Also many men now have vasectomy in their 20ties. It is recommended to keep it a secret, not sure how studies correct for that.


>> Also many men now have vasectomy in their 20ties. It is recommended to keep it a secret,

Anecdotes are not data, but I had a vasectomy in my early 30's. We didn't want more kids, and the wife informed me she wasn't planning on taking the pill for the next 25 years.

I wasn't told to "keep it a secret" but equally it wasn't something other men spoke about, so there was some reluctance (on my part) to do it. I, and some others in my cohort of a similar age, though decided to not hide it, but be honest - yes I'm going to be out of work on Tuesday, going for a vasectomy. It did encourage a few folk to come talk about it when it was topical for them.

Men (naturally) have a fear of anything that interferes with their privates. But we do need to be more honest about it - vasectomies are ultimately cheaper, less invasive, and have fewer side effects than other forms of contraception. Yes it is permanent - but if you're ready for that then I encourage you to ask around - you may find others around you have done it, and that it's really not a big deal.

And if you have had it, well, perhaps it's not really something that needs to be a secret. (Especially if you are the first in your social circle to do it.)


> Yes it is permanent

Vasectomy are reversible.


They can be early on, sperm can also be extracted for IVF but for the most part it’s not considered a reversible procedure hence why already having kids is usually a requirement for getting one.

There is no guarantee that a reversal will be successful and the success rate drops sharply with time.

I hope for your sake you didn’t get one thinking that it can be reversed.


Thanks for the advice and genuine concern. I stand corrected, mine was a theoretical knowledge and no I did not take any decision based upon that (incomplete) knowledge.


I got told that there was a 60% chance that a reversal would be successful. They didn't say anything about it being less likely with time.

So yes... maybe.


If you visit sites like 4chan, you'll see posts about it all the time. Apparently its a popular conspiracy theory to get rid the world of white people. It called the great replacement or something like it. Apparently white people have low birth rates. Hence the conspiracy theory. Though I think Japanese people have lower birth rates. So not sure if the theory really holds under any scrutiny. Unless, I suppose maybe you think the conspirators also hate Sushi. In which case, it makes total sense.


A good conspiracy theory always contains a grain of truth. Confirmation bias will do the rest for you.

Lower birthrates are happening across the board, so if somebody told you you were targeted they would see enough evidence to confirm this. You have to ignore that this affects the whole world, but that's easy.


I live in Germany and have 4 children at 29, which seems to be about the average amongst my peer group. My brothers each have 2,5,3 children. We are not from Europe originally however so who knows maybe we haven't been exposed to plastics yet or it might be the fact that we're decently fit physically speaking.


Your peer group is far from average, though: https://www.statista.com/statistics/295397/fertility-rate-in...


file under: feature, not bug.


... in the Western countries.


It's the unsaturated fat, but I can already hear the triggering from pointing this fact out.


[flagged]


This kind of of sweeping value judgement is sexist and totally inappropriate.


Where is he expecting to find all those under 26 year olds with no debt and a house? The median house in the US is almost 300k. Why do his goals for acceptable mate include must be in the 1%?


Who are these under-26 individuals who own a house to begin with, male or female?


[flagged]


Nah, take your views somewhere they’d be accepted, like not here. I saw your post and it isn’t acceptable.


It takes a few decades and milions $ to raise a family. It is perfectly valid to have a discussion how to find a good partner for startup or business. But not for this? No wonder most people will never have children.


> No wonder most people will never have children.

Yeah, I'm going to call BS on that claim.


That is correct, discussing how to find a romantic partner (especially in the terms you've used) is probably not going to be well received on this particular site.


Fair enough, but that doesn't change the fact that this is sexist. It's understandable that, exactly because of how you were raised, you might not completely understand that. But calling another human 'good' based on such rather shallow materialistic values is just showing a complete lack of respect, sorry.


"good woman to start family with" does not reflect general quality of person. 70 years old could be amazing person, but not great bride.


[flagged]


Genocidal ideas are more common than we like to admit.


I mean, there are only two ways this can go:

1. Humanity's population decreases (voluntarily or otherwise)

2. We figure out how to get humans off of this one specific oblate spheroid we call "Earth"

Personally, I'd much rather see Option #2 happen, but given how unwilling we seem to be as a species to pursue that branch, #1 seems to be inevitable.


Let's just be honest about what we are doing.


Genocide is the intentional killing of large numbers of people. Failing to procreate isn’t that.


Denying procreation is a genocide as well. E.g. sterilisation of a large number of people would be a genocide.


Says who? “A pyramid unfinished” indeed.


You need only one man with healthy sperm and 1000 women to repopulate the world.

The infertility crisis is certainly not due to sperm quality as the title suggests.

Postponing pregnancy to later age on female side seems more like the culprit.

But I guess it is modern to blame everything on men these days, so current culture will like the sperm quality hypothesis more.


The article is not about general infertility in couples.

It is specifically about male infertility, based on an objective measure of fertility (sperm count), which has indeed dropped over the past few decades - no one is trying to "blame everything on men".


Hello Czech breakfast (snídaně).

"You need only one man with healthy sperm and 1000 women to repopulate the world."

While true, our societies are based on long-term pairs having children, not a set of elite sperm knights who go around and impregnate wives of everybody.

Both effects can happen at the same time. Yes, female fertility goes down with age. But male reproductive health isn't what it used to be either, and provably so. Taken together, those effects cause a significant problem.

We must care more about phthalates and other hormone mimicking stuff in our food chain. Humans aren't even the only species that has the same problems.


> You need only one man with healthy sperm and 1000 women to repopulate the world.

Seems like a surefire way to end up with genetic bottlenecks galore.




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