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They Can Sow But Can’t Reap: The Demise of Human Sperm
by John Robbins
In Diet For A New America I stated that we are
witnessing a dramatic decline in human sperm
quantity and quality. If this is true, it is obviously of
foremost importance. While it is true that only one
sperm is required to fertilize an egg, once sperm
counts drop below a certain point infertility becomes
increasingly common.
While skeptics and representatives of the chemical
industry have attacked Diet For A New America, and
said sperm counts are not really dropping, developments
since the book was published in 1987 have not
been reassuring.
A 1992 study in the British Medical Journal found
that men in Western countries today have less than
half the sperm production their grandfathers had at
the same age. (1) The report examined 61 separate
studies of sperm count in men in many countries,
including the U.S., and concluded that there has been
a 42% decrease in average sperm count, from 113
million per milliliter (ml) to 66 million per ml, since
1940.
(There are 4.5 milliliters in a teaspoon). Furthermore,
the average volume of semen diminished from
3.4 ml to 2.75 ml, a 20% loss since 1940. Thus the
average man has lost 53% of sperm production in the
last 50 years.
How low can sperm counts drop before men become
infertile? In many instances, men are considered
infertile if their sperm counts drop as low as 20
million per ml, although it is still possible for a man
with that sperm count to sire a child if other factors
are all favorable. If sperm count drops much below
that, however, reproduction becomes increasingly
unlikely. Below 5 million, a man is definitely sterile.
Diminished sperm count is not the only factor in
male sterility. If sperm quality is compromised,
higher sperm counts are needed for reproduction to
take place. As sperm motility (the ability of the sperm
to move) is impaired, the sperm may be unable to
pass through the cervical mucous or penetrate the
hard outer shell of the egg. When sperm motility is
reduced, sperm become increasingly incapable of
fertilizing the egg.
Abnormally shaped sperm also have difficulty
fertilizing an egg. In one study, if 14% or more of
sperm had round enlarged heads (indicating early
unraveling of genetic material) the chances for
pregnancy fell to about 20%. (2)
It appears increasingly certain that in today’s world
both the quantity and quality of male human sperm
are declining. The New England Journal of Medicine
reported in 1995 that not only had sperm count
declined 33% during the past 20 years among fertile,
healthy men in Paris, France, but also that, during
the same period, the proportion of motile sperm
(sperm able to swim) declined at the rate of 0.6% per
year, and the proportion of normally shaped sperm
(compared to misshapen sperm) declined at the rate
of 0.5% per year. (3)
We now have a scientific consensus that both sperm
counts and the quality of sperm are declining. Yet the
chemical industry has only stepped up its efforts to
convince the public and elected officials that the data
is too ambiguous and controversial to justify alarm.
To do so, they point to possible “confounding
factors,” such as subject abstinence time before
sampling, and differing methods of analysis, that can
influence the accuracy of sperm count data. Their
tactic is to take legitimate but relatively minor issues
and blow them out of all proportion to imply that
nothing conclusive has been learned.
In 1999, however, the journal BioEssays published a
major report by University of Missouri epidemiologist
Shanna Swan that found the dramatic decline of
average sperm density in the U.S. and Western
Europe to be even greater than previously
estimated. (4) In a meta-review of data from more
than 60 studies, Swan found that average sperm
counts among healthy American men dropped from
120 million sperm per milliliter of semen in 1938 to
just over 50 million in 1988. In Europe, she found,
sperm counts dropped to roughly the same level, and
have been dropping by the staggering rate of 3.1%
each year between 1971 and 1990.
Despite the efforts of the Chemical Manufacturer’s
Association, Monsanto, DuPont, etc., to cloud the
issue, the evidence of declining sperm levels continues to mount. It was The New Yorker Magazine that,
in 1961, first published Rachel Carson’s Silent
Spring. In 1996, The New Yorker Magazine ran a
long feature story called “Silent Sperm.” (5) The
author, Lawrence Wright, interviewed dozens of
prominent researchers in the field of endocrinology
and reproductive health and made some interesting
points:
1) Danish endocrinologist Niels E.
Skakkebaek said it has become difficult for
sperm banks to establish a core of donors.
In some areas of Denmark, for example,
they are having to recruit ten potential
donors to fine one with good semen quality.
2) Skakkebaek also reported that 84% of
the Danish men he studied had sperm
quality below the standards set by the
World Health Organization.
3) There has been a three-fold increase in
men whose sperm count is below 20
million, the point at which fertility is
jeopardized.
4) Researchers at the Washington Fertility
Study Center report that the sperm counts
of their donors, largely medical students,
have suffered a steady decline for many
years, to the point that the researchers are now
worried that, if the decline continues at the same
rate, by the year 2002 there will be no potential
donors who can meet the approved or recommended
standards.
5) The fact is that the number of morphologically
normal sperm (meaning sperm with a normal shape)
produced by the average man has dropped below the
level of those of a hamster, which has testicles a
fraction the size of a man’s.
Why is all this happening? The prevailing explanation
implicates environmental chemicals called
endocrine disrupters that masquerade as hormones.
Specifically, synthetic chemicals that mimic the
female sex hormone estrogen may influence male
development in utero or during the formative years
of early childhood when hormone sensitivity is high.
In 1993, a study published in The Lancet traced the
decline to males being exposed in the womb to female
sex hormones that permanently alter their sexual
development, and greatly reduce a man’s ability to
produce sperm. (6) The study, along with one published
later in 1993 in the Journal of Endocrinology
established several diet-linked sources of increased
estrogenic exposure to males in the womb (7) :
1) The modern diet increases the levels of natural
estrogen in women. Fiber in the diet today is lower
than it was 50 years ago. Natural estrogens excreted
in the bile are more readily reabsorbed into the
bloodstream when the lower intestine contains little
dietary fiber. Thus, a fetus today may be exposed to
higher levels of the mother’s own natural estrogens,
compared to a fetus 50 years ago. (Fiber is found in
all whole grains, vegetables and fruits; and is absent
in all meats, dairy products, and eggs.)
2) Synthetic estrogens, including DES, were fed to
beef cattle from the 1950s through the 1970s to make
them grow more meat faster. Though DES has been
outlawed for use in U.S. livestock, hormones such as
Steer-oid, Ralgro, Compudose, and Synovex are still
used in virtually every cattle feedlot in the country.
This is the primary reason the European Economic
Union refuses to import U.S. beef. Such practices
have increased the quantity of estrogens in meat-eating
women, and may have contaminated some
water supplies.
3) Another source of increased estrogens in women
today is the many synthetic organic chemicals and
heavy metals that have been released into the
environment in massive quantities since World War
II. Some of these compounds, such as PCBs and
dioxins, concentrate in ever higher levels on higher
rungs of the food chains. Vegetarians, and even more
notably vegans, thus enjoy some degree of protection.
4) A study published in The Lancet in 1994 found
that organic farmers had much higher sperm counts
than farmers using chemicals. (8)
Many animals produce up to 1,400 times as much
sperm as is needed for fertility. (9) Human males are
not nearly so prolific. The average human male
produces only five or six times as much sperm as is
needed for fertility. In the best of circumstances,
humans don’t have much sperm to spare.
To summarize, in the last 50 years, the sperm count
of the average American male has dropped from 120
million sperm per milliliter of semen to just over 50
million, and there have been losses in sperm quality
that markedly enlarge the impact and significance of
these reductions. At levels of 20 million, many men
experience an inability to reproduce, but with the
decline in sperm motility and in normally shaped
sperm we may in the future see higher sperm counts
needed for fertility. Meanwhile, sperm counts
continue to drop. At what point will our elected
officials wake up?
In recent years, we have seen the tobacco industry
defend its products by trying to create a smokescreen
of controversy — and the result has been millions of
deaths to lung cancer, emphysema, etc. Now we are seeing the
chemical industry doing the same thing, only the result may
eventually come to jeopardize the survival not just of countless
individuals, but of our species itself.
Footnotes
1 Elizabeth Carlsen and others, “Evidence for decreasing quality of semen during
the past 50 years,” British Medical Journal Vol 305, 1992, pgs 609-613
2 “Infertility In Men,” Sept 1998; http://my.webmd.com/content/dmk/
dmk_article_40051
3 Jacques Auger and others, “Decline in Semen Quality Among Fertile Men in Paris
During the Past 20 Years,” New England Journal of Medicine, Vol 332, No. 5,
February 2, 1995, pgs 281-285
4 Brian Halweil, “Sperm Counts Are Dropping” World Watch, March/April, 1999,
pgs 32-33. Rochelle Jones, “Is the Environment Hurting Men?” WebMD.com,
January 3, 2000
5 Lawrence Wright, “Silent Sperm” the New Yorker Magazine, January 15, 1996
6 Richard M. Sharpe and Niels E. Skakkebaek, “Are oestrogens involved in falling
sperm counts and disorders of the male reproductive tract?” The Lancet, Vol.
341, May 29, 1993, pgs 1392-1395
7 R.M. Sharpe, “Declining sperm counts in men ? is there an endocrine cause?”
Journal of Endocrinology, Vol 136, 1993, pgs. 357-360
8 Annette Abell and others, “High sperm density among members of organic
farmers’ association,” The Lancet, Vol 343, June 11, 1994, pg 1498
9 Peter K. Working, “Male Reproductive Toxicology: Comparison of the Human to
Animal Models,” Environmental Health Perspectives, Vol 77, 1988, pgs 37-44
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