Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Heat waves could impair male fertility

- By Isaac Stanley-Becker The Washington Post

One way that heat kills is by increasing pressure in the skull, constricti­ng blood flow to the brain. Damaged tissue can also enter the bloodstrea­m and cause kidney failure. At a certain point, an elevated internal temperatur­e simply incinerate­s cells in the body.

In contrast to extreme weather events so visible and violent that they hardly escape public notice, such as hurricanes and tornadoes, heat waves are more of a “silent killer,” as the National Weather Service has called the prolonged periods of hot weather.

But kill they certainly do. Heat fatalities in the United States exceed all other weather-related deaths in the 30 years since such data have been available. In Britain, Parliament’s Environmen­tal Audit Committee recently warned of 7,000 annual deaths by heat by 2050 unless quick action is taken, the need for which was underscore­d by October’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change report.

Heat doesn’t just kill. It also diminishes the vitality of sperm, curtailing the capacity to reproduce, as scientists have documented.

“Heatwaves reduce male fertility and sperm competitiv­eness, and successive heatwaves almost sterilise males,” wrote the authors of a study published in November in the peerreview­ed Nature Communicat­ions.

But the research points newly to an even longerlast­ing effect. Ecologists and evolutiona­ry biologists at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, found that heat stress appears to be associated with transgener­ational fertility problems.

That means organisms may bear the effects of elevated temperatur­es long after the initial exposure — in the form of reduced life spans, reproducti­ve challenges and other defects passed to offspring.

The scientists found that heat waves undermine sperm production and viability, and also interfere with movement through the female. They further discovered that extreme heat “reduced reproducti­ve potential and lifespan of offspring when fathered by males, or sperm, that had experience­d heatwaves.”

The researcher­s used red flour beetles to test sensitivit­y to temperatur­e in coldbloode­d ectotherms, species that don’t regulate their own body temperatur­e, in contrast to endotherms, such as humans. Warmbloode­d mammals have been the primary focus of existing research on warming and sperm quality, their paper noted.

They set out to fill this gap while finding applicatio­ns to the human case. Most terrestria­l species are insects, and most life on Earth is coldbloode­d, making the findings especially relevant to the question of climate change’s effect on biodiversi­ty.

As the lead author, Matthew Gage, observed in an accompanyi­ng blog post on the study, “we know that insect numbers are crashing, but we understand remarkably little about the particular mechanisms driving population declines.”

To examine one possible mechanism, reproducti­on, the scientists exposed mature adult beetles to experiment­al heat waves lasting five days at 104 to 107.5 degrees Fahrenheit — above their optimum by about 10 degrees. “It’s worth noting that these temperatur­es have been exceeded in the natural environmen­t in half the world’s countries over recent years,” Gage wrote. Each male was paired with a female for 15 minutes before being transferre­d to the next mate.

Male reproducti­ve performanc­e halved after a first heat wave. After a second, males became almost completely sterile — contradict­ing theories of acclimatio­n or hardening as a response to environmen­tal stress.

Female potential was unchanged, however, inseminate­d sperm already within the female tract were vulnerable to elevated heat and caused a reduction in female fertility by one-third.

Most surprising, Gage said, was the effect they observed across generation­s.

“It suggests there could be problems for sons,” he said. “We know that in humans, heat can damage sperm DNA, and we know that men with damaged DNA in their sperm have problems with fertility, but you can’t really do an experiment to heat males up and look at whether that damages human offspring performanc­e, so this is one way to get at that.”

The results, he said, primarily indicate problems with fertility — with the clearest implicatio­ns for insect biodiversi­ty — but there is also evidence of an “underlying, longerterm damage as a result of damaged sperm DNA.”

“In much the same way that radiation causes damage, and that can lead to offspring problems, there could be that kind of damage operating as a consequenc­e of heat conditions,” Gage said. “You’re looking at possible population viability problems, which need to be studied more.”

When it comes to humans, not all population­s will be equally affected, studies have shown. The elderly, low-income people and those who are immobile or have pre-existing health issues are especially vulnerable.

While the results of the experiment don’t offer conclusion­s about population viability, they offer insight into how a particular­ly sensitive trait, sperm function, reacts to heat waves, which scientists say will continue to be among the severe effects of global climate change.

“If sperm function goes down, reproducti­on goes down,” Gage said. “If reproducti­on goes down, you’re looking at population viability problems.”

 ?? GETTY ?? Scientists have documented that heat diminishes the vitality of sperm, curtailing the capacity to reproduce.
GETTY Scientists have documented that heat diminishes the vitality of sperm, curtailing the capacity to reproduce.

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