Heat waves from climate change may zap male fertility for many species
Male flour beetles exposed to heat waves in the lab had far fewer, less fertile offspring
Would-be fathers have long been advised to wear boxer shorts and avoid hot tubs, to avoid too much heat damaging their reproductive chances.
Now it turns out the same effect — but caused by stronger heat waves driven by climate change — may be behind huge declines in insect numbers, scientists said in a study published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.
They found that male red flour beetles exposed to a heatwave in the lab had half the expected number of offspring, and that exposure to a second heatwave, 10 days later, virtually sterilized the males.
Male flour beetles sired by heat-damaged fathers also lived shorter lives themselves and had much less success reproducing, said Matt Gage, a biologist at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, and head of the research team.
While fewer pests in your flour might sound like good news, it appears the same principles might apply further up the food chain as well, including potentially to people.
"We've known for hundreds of years that male fertility is sensitive to heat," Gage told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
But, in particular, "the trans-generational effect was very surprising" in the new research, he said.
"Effectively we're heating the planet up and that's stopping us from reproducing."
A 2017 study found that flying insect populations in German nature reserves had plunged more than 75 per cent over about 30 years.
Gage's team believes that may be linked to an increasing number of heat waves over those decades — a concern for the planet's biodiversity — and potentially for would-be parents — as climate change brings hotter, longer heat waves.
Applies to humans?
Birth rates among people already dip in very hot periods, and not just because the prospect of a particularly sweaty tryst can sound fairly unappealing, scientists believe.
A study published in the journal Demography this year found that "sexual behaviour probably wasn't the explanatory factor" behind dips in conception during heat waves, Gage said.
Instead, excess heat may have damaged sperm, leading to the risk of genetic damage and making a successful pregnancy less likely, he said.
Could doctors one day issue alerts warning would-be parents to avoid conceiving during heat waves, to avoid potential genetic damage?
Gage isn't so sure.
"We'd really like to know what the mechanism of this trans-generational damage is," he said. "We know radiation causes mutations in offspring. It's possible heat could be doing similar things."
Regardless, the new study's findings "are very important for understanding how species react to climate change," he noted.