The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Scientists ponder an evolutiona­ry mystery: The female orgasm

Two evolutiona­ry biologists have offered a new way of thinking about the experience based on a reconstruc­tion of its ancient history

- Carl Zimmer

AN EYE is for seeing, a nose is for smelling. Many aspects of the human body have obvious purposes. But some defy easy explanatio­n. For biologists, few phenomena are as mysterious as the female orgasm. While orgasms have an important role in a woman’s intimate relationsh­ips, the evolutiona­ry roots of the experience—a combinatio­n of muscle contractio­ns, hormone release and intense pleasure—have been difficult to uncover.

For decades, researcher­s have put forward theories, but none are widely accepted. Now, two evolutiona­ry biologists have joined the fray, offering a new way of thinking about the female orgasm based on a reconstruc­tion of its ancient history. Earlier this week, in The Journal of Experiment­al Zoology, the authors conclude that the response originated in mammals more than 150 million years ago as a way to release eggs to be fertilised after sex.

Until now, few scientists have investigat­ed the biology of distantly related animals for clues to the mystery. “For orgasms, we kept it reserved for humans and primates,” says Mihaela Pavlicev, an evolutiona­ry biologist at University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and an author of the new paper. “We didn’t look to other species to dig deeper and look for the origin.”

The male orgasm has never caused much of a stir among evolutiona­ry biologists. The pleasure is precisely linked to ejaculatio­n, the most important step in passing on a male’s genes to the next generation. That pleasure encourages men to deliver more sperm, which is evolutiona­rily advantageo­us.

For women, the evolutiona­ry path is harder to figure out. The muscle contractio­ns that occur during an orgasm are not essential for a woman to become pregnant. And while most men can experience an orgasm during sex, it’s less reliable for women. In a 2010 survey, 35.6% of women said they hadn’t had an orgasm the most recent time they had sex. Part of the reason for this is anatomy: the clitoris is physically separated from the vagina.

Still, a number of scientists suspect that the female orgasm serves some biological function favoured by natural selection. They just need to figure out what it is.

“My gut instinct is that something that matters so much at an emotional level—the intense pleasure of orgasm—would seem to have reproducti­ve consequenc­es,” says David A Puts, an evolutiona­ry anthropolo­gist at Pennsylvan­ia State University.

Many hypotheses have been put forward. Puts and his colleagues have carried out studies to test the possibilit­y that orgasms increase the odds that a woman’s eggs are fertilised by a geneticall­y attractive male. Elisabeth A Lloyd, a philosophe­r at Indiana University, isn’t buying it. In 2005, she published a book called The Case of the Female Orgasm, in which she reviewed 18 published theories about its function.

None had strong evidence in its favour, she concluded, and many were undermined by other findings about human sexuality. Years of further research have only strengthen­ed her scepticism.

Lloyd thinks the best explanatio­n for the female orgasm is that it hasn’t served any evolutiona­ry purpose at all. It’s nothing more than the byproduct of the developmen­t of the male orgasm. The orgasm is to women, she believes, as nipples are to men.

But now, Pavlicev and her colleague, Gu¨nter P Wagner of Yale University, are making the case that the human female orgasm has a deep evolutiona­ry history that reaches back to early mammals.

They began by getting better acquainted with the sex lives of other animals, poring through obscure old journals to gather informatio­n on species ranging from aardvarks to koalas. They noted that many female mammals release oxytocin and prolactin during sex—the hormones released by women during orgasms. What’s more, in many of those species, females use a radically different kind of reproducti­on.

While women release an egg each month, other female mammals, such as rabbits and camels, release an egg only after mating with a male.

Ovulatory cycles evolved in only a few lineages of mammals, including our own, Pavlicev and Wagner found. Before then, our ancient mammal ancestors originally relied on ovulation triggered by sex with a male. Those early mammals developed a clitoris inside the vagina. Only in mammals that evolved ovulatory cycles did the clitoris move away. Based on these findings, Pavlicev and Wagner argue that the female orgasm first evolved as a reflex to help females become pregnant.

When early mammals mated, the clitoris could send signals to the brain, triggering hormones that released an egg. Once the egg became fertilised, the hormones may have helped ensure it became implanted in the uterus. This arrangemen­t has worked well for mammals that rarely encounter males. It helps females make the most of each mating. But eventually, some mammals, including primates like us, started spending their lives in social groups. Females had access to regular sex with males, and orgasm as an ovulatory mechanism was no longer so useful. Our female forebears instead evolved a new system: releasing eggs in a regular cycle.

As the original purpose of the orgasm was lost, the clitoris moved away from its original position. Wagner speculated that this shift was part of evolution’s dismantlin­g of a sensor system: “You don’t want to have the old signal sending noise at the wrong time,” he says.

“Basically, we don’t know why this happened,” he adds. But across mammalian species, “it’s just a very strong evolutiona­ry patter n.”

Lloyd and Puts welcomed the new study as a provocativ­e addition to the debate over the female orgasms.

“I’m pretty excited that it’s being published,” Lloyd says, “because people are going to start talking about female orgasms and getting a fresh look at how much we don’t know about female orgasms, and thinking hard about what we need to know.” The new theory may shed light on how the human female orgasm first evolved, but Pavlicev and Wagner say it doesn’t settle the debate about its current role in women. “All directions are open,” Wagner says. Wagner says decipherin­g the history of the female orgasm might improve reproducti­ve medicine. “I think you’re looking at the whole woman’s reproducti­ve system a little differentl­y when you have a model for how it might have evolved,” he says. NYT

For decades, researcher­s have put forward theories, but none are widely accepted. Now, new research says the response originated in mammals more than 150 million years ago as a way to release eggs to be fertilised after sex

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