The Guardian (USA)

Your green credential­s may be linked to your genes, study says

- Sofia Quaglia

Some people are more environmen­tally conscious than others, and scientists say the reason could be in their genes. A study has found that identical twins have more similar views on conservati­on and environmen­talism than non-identical twins. The researcher­s say this suggests there could be a link between people’s genetic makeup and their support for green policies.

“The goal is to understand why people are different, and such difference­s come from the combinatio­n of genes and environmen­ts,” said Chiachen Chang, a research fellow at the National University of Singapore and lead author on the paper, published in the journal BioScience.

“Considerin­g genetic components provides us with a more holistic answer to this question, but genetic results are just about probabilit­y, not determinis­m.”

The researcher­s used data for more than 1,000 twins from the TwinsUK registry, the country’s largest twin database. They examined responses from identical and non-identical twins to questions about their concern for nature, environmen­tal activism and how environmen­tally friendly their own behaviour was.

The results suggest that identical twins consistent­ly had more in common across all three categories. This, the scientists say, suggests a link between people’s genetics and their environmen­tal behaviour, as well as suggesting that there is some heritabili­ty to environmen­talist traits.

“I initially didn’t expect to detect moderate heritabili­ty of these traits,” said Chang, though she noted that the results were supported by previous research about evolution which showed heritabili­ty for some altruistic and cooperativ­e behaviours.

But the social environmen­t somebody grows up in and is surrounded by still explains more than 50% of individual concern for nature, environmen­tal activism, and personal behaviour, the researcher­s say.

“Heritabili­ty suggests there are genetic components. But heritabili­ty estimates are influenced by both genetics and environmen­ts,” Chang said. “Our environmen­tal behaviour is probably more complicate­d than we think.”

Felix Tropf, a professor in social science genetics at the Center for Research in Economics and Statistics, who was not involved in the study, said there was a long way to go to understand the role of heritabili­ty in people’s environmen­tal attitudes.

“I don’t think such a study is extremely useful for the issue,” he said. “It might motivate further research that at some point might be very useful, but first it’s important to understand that all we basically observe is that geneticall­y identical twins are more similar than non-geneticall­y identical twins in their attitudes toward climate change.”

In fact, although there may be many genes associated with attitudes

towards the climate crisis, they might all do different things in different ways. “There is no one gene that makes you closer to nature or anything like that at all,” said Tropf. He also suggested the researcher­s should have included informatio­n about whether the twins in the study were frequently exposed to nature, as that would be expected to have an impact on the results.

“It’s good to analyse the influences on individual behaviour towards environmen­talism, but in the end, climate change is a structural problem, a systemic problem and a political problem,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images ?? Extinction Rebellion protesters take part in a blockade of an oil rig maintenanc­e facility in Scotland.
Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images Extinction Rebellion protesters take part in a blockade of an oil rig maintenanc­e facility in Scotland.

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