Jim Devine:

>I don't see why the obvious lust for oil has to be based on a view that 
>"oil is running out." Lots of people, including yours truly, have a lust 
>for sex without assuming that "sex is running out."

But in a certain sense sex *is* running out, for reasons parallel to the 
LONG-TERM energy crisis (as opposed to short-term spikes in supply and demand).

http://www.rachel.org/search/index.cfm?St=1

#477 - Sperm in the News, January 18, 1996

This must be the year of the sperm. The NEW YORKER magazine ran a long 
story[1] January 15th called "Silent Sperm" --a wry reference to Rachel 
Carson's SILENT SPRING, which made its debut in the NEW YORKER 35 years 
ago. "Silent Sperm" describes the 50% loss in sperm count that has occurred 
in men worldwide during the past 40 years. Furthermore, the January issue 
of ESQUIRE features an article on sperm loss,[2] titled "Downward 
Motility." MOTHER JONES magazine[3] also began the new year with a sperm 
story, titled "Down for the Count." And the nation's newspaper of record, 
the NEW YORK TIMES, ran a 4-part, front-page series on increasing 
infertility in the U.S. January 7-10.
By far the most interesting and informative of these articles are by 
Lawrence Wright in the NEW YORKER and Daniel Pinchbeck in ESQUIRE. Wright 
and Pinchbeck interviewed dozens of prominent researchers in the field of 
endocrinology (hormones) and reproductive health in the U.S., Britain and 
Europe, and their articles offer new human perspectives on the scientific 
information we have been presenting since 1991 (see REHW #263, #264, #323, 
#343, #365, #372, #377, #432, #438, #446, #447, #448).

Here are some viewpoints that we have not previously offered our readers in 
our own coverage of this issue:

** Danish pediatric endocrinologist (hormone specialist) Niels E. 
Skakkebaek says that, in the late 1980s, "We had also been wondering why it 
was so difficult for sperm banks to establish a core of donors. In some 
areas of Denmark, they were having to recruit ten potential donors to find 
one with good semen quality."[1,pg.43]

** So Skakkebaek in 1990 studied sperm quality in Danish men. He started 
with men working in nonhazardous office jobs and laborers who did not work 
directly with industrial chemicals or pesticides --men thought to be 
healthy. For decades it had been believed that the average man produced 
about a hundred million sperm per milliliter of semen, and of that about 
20% was expected to be immobile. Skakkebaek reported that 84% of the Danish 
men he studied had sperm quality below the standards set by the World 
Health Organization. The men themselves seemed normal in every other 
respect.[1,pg.43]

** On the basis of the world's medical literature, Skakkebaek calculates 
that in 1940 the average sperm count was 113 million per milliliter, and 
that 50 years later it had fallen to 66 million. [1,pg.44]

** Still more serious is a three-fold increase in men whose sperm count was 
below 20 million--the point at which their fertility would be 
jeopardized.[1,pg.44]

** In the United States, just as in Denmark, the number of donors with 
good-quality sperm has become distressingly low. As early as 1981, 
researchers at the Washington Fertility Study Center reported that sperm 
count of their donors, who were largely medical students, had suffered a 
steady decline over the previous eight years. The researchers worried that, 
if the decline continued at the same rate, within the decade there would be 
no potential donors who could meet the approved or recommended 
standards.[1,pg.44]

** 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.[1,pg.44]

** In the United States, according to the National Center for Health 
Statistics, the percentage of infertile couples has risen from 14.4 in 1965 
to 18.5 in 1995. Infertility is defined as failure to produce a child after 
a year of normal sex.[1,pg.44]

** There has been little published research comparing racial and ethnic 
sperm counts, particularly in Africa and many Third World countries. But 
the studies that we do have show low counts nearly everywhere: the latest 
count in Nigeria is 64 million per milliliter; in Pakistan, 79.5 million; 
in Germany, 78 million; in Hong Kong, 62 million.[1,pgs.44-45]

** Pierre Jouannet, director of the Centre d'Etude et de Conservation des 
Oeufs et du Sperme in Paris, simply did not believe Skakkebaek's 
conclusions. Jouannet had data on 1350 Parisian men, all of whom had 
fathered at least one child and therefore were of proven fertility, so he 
analyzed them, expecting to refute Skakkebaek's studies. To his 
astonishment he found that sperm counts in his group had dropped steadily 
at 2% per year for the past 20 years; in 1973 the average count was 89 
million per milliliter and in 1992 it was 60 million. [1,pg.45]

** The expected sperm count for a Parisian man born in 1945 was 102 
million, whereas the count of those born in 1962 was exactly half that 
number.[1,pg.45]

** Jouannet has become convinced. And when he projects the decline into the 
future, he sees serious trouble for the human species. He says gravely, at 
the present rate of decline, "It will take 70 or 80 years before it [sperm 
count] goes to zero."[1,pg.45] [Difficulty conceiving occurs at 20 million 
or less; sterility occurs at five million or less.]

** Stewart Irvine, a gynecologist at the Medical Research Council's 
Reproductive Biology Unit in Edinburgh, Scotland, studied sperm production 
of Scottish males. Men born in the 1940s had an average sperm count of 128 
million, whereas those born in the second half of the 1960s averaged only 
75 million--a decline of over 40% in a single generation.

** Irvine told Lawrence Wright, "I had a colleague visiting from Australia, 
and he had with him a laptop computer with lots of data from infertile 
couples. He said, 'I'm sure these sperm count drops are rubbish. I'm sure 
there are other explanations for it.' And I said, 'Well, just take your 
data and plot it by year of birth and see what you get.' He got the same 
result."[1,pg.46]

** "Infertility is definitely going up," says Dr. Marc Goldstein, director 
of the Center for Male Reproductive Medicine at New York Hospital. "I see 
it in my practice. There is a decline in fertility in men and an increase 
in infertility in older couples. Studies show an increase in infertility 
from 11 percent to 16 percent in all married couples." He believes part of 
it may be life style: marijuana, cocaine, alcohol, and sexually transmitted 
diseases can all reduce sperm counts. [2,pg.80]

** But wildlife do not smoke marijuana or drink alcohol and there are 
numerous reports of reproductive problems caused by chlorinated chemicals 
in wildlife.

** Niels Skakkebaek, the Danish researcher, believes it is something more 
fundamental than life style. Whatever is happening to men, he believes, 
some part of it must take place during the early stages of human 
development--in the womb or else shortly after birth--because damage to the 
male urogenital system is evident in certain very young patients.[1,pg.47]

** Likewise, Richard M. Sharpe, a research physiologist with the Medical 
Research Council in Edinburgh, Scotland, thinks that the decline in sperm 
is linked to some event that affects the endocrine system, which governs 
the body's hormones. This must happen, he believes, either in the womb or 
shortly after birth. "I have absolutely no doubt this is the most important 
time in your life, certainly if you're a male," he says. "This is when your 
sperm-producing capacity as an adult is settled once and for all."[1,pg.48] 
Changes in life style won't help men whose sperm-producing capacity has 
been crippled at birth.

** In a series of experiments, Sharpe exposed pregnant rats to "minute 
quantities" of DES and to other synthetic estrogens [female sex hormones]; 
he showed a 5 to 15% decline in sperm count in male offspring when they 
matured. [DES, or diethylstilbestrol, is a synthetic female sex hormone 
that was given medically to women in the U.S. in the 1950s and 1960s; many 
of their male offspring have reduced sperm counts.][1,pg.48]

** Philippe Grandjean, a professor of environmental medicine at Odense 
University in Denmark summarized the situation nicely in an interview with 
Lawrence Wright: "We thought in the past that these toxic substances would 
act on a target--an enzyme or DNA or the cell membrane, or something like 
that. But what these endocrinologists have suggested to us is that 
industrial chemicals can actually mimic hormones. It looks as if the 
receptors aren't very good at recognizing what's a hormone and what's not a 
hormone--perhaps because they were never previously challenged. These 
receptors have been kept almost unchanged in the mammalian world, because 
they worked. They functioned very well. But in this century we have 
generated all these new chemicals and injected them into the envi-ronment, 
and suddenly the body is exposed to new substances that in some cases can 
interact with that receptor. The human species is totally unprepared for 
this, because it has never happened before. I think the perspective is both 
very exciting and very, very frightening."[1,pg.51]

** Most--though not all--of the estrogen-mimicking chemicals involve chlorine.

** If, as Theo Colborn theorizes, the number of chemicals that can harm 
reproduction add up to hundreds, if not thousands, the only way to regulate 
them all will be to "reverse the onus" that now falls on individuals to 
prove they have been harmed by a toxic substance. "The responsibility 
should not be on the people exposed to chemicals to prove they have been 
hurt," says David LaRoche, the secretary of the International Joint 
Commission (IJC). "The responsibility should be on industry to prove that 
chemicals cause no harm."[2,pg.84]

** "I have heard that the Chlorine Chemistry Council's budget is around 
$100 million," Gordon Durnil told Daniel Pinchbeck. Durnil is the former 
chairman of the IJC and author of THE MAKING OF A CONSERVATIVE 
ENVIRONMENTALIST. (See REHW #423, #424.) "It's a lot of money. You could 
use it to buy some research. Why don't they do some research to say what 
they are doing is safe?" Durnil asks.[2,pg.84]

** Unfortunately, the truth about the sperm count is that it is under 
attack from many different sources. Dioxin, for example, is a chlorinated 
chemical that does not mimic hormones. Yet it diminishes sperm count in 
male animals.

** Earl Gray, a senior research biologist with U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency (EPA), testified before Congress in 1993 that, "Our 
studies [in rats] show that a single dose of dioxin administered during 
pregnancy permanently reduces sperm counts in the males by about 60 per 
cent."[1,pg.53]

** "With sperm counts, I've been more impressed by the dioxins and the PCBs 
than by the estrogens and anti-androgens," Gray said. "We get surprising 
effects at relatively low doses."[1,pg.53]

** "Probably half the jobs in the world are associated in some way with 
chlorine," says Gordon Durnil. "As a society, we are going to have to 
confront our dependence on this chemical."[2,pg.82]

--Peter Montague

=====

[1] Lawrence Wright, "Silent Sperm," NEW YORKER (January 15, 1996), pgs. 
42-48, 50-53, 55.

[2] Daniel Pinchbeck, "Downward Motility," ESQUIRE (January 1996), pgs. 79-84.

[3] Michael Castleman, "Down for the Count," MOTHER JONES (January/February 
1996), pgs. 20-21.





Louis Proyect
www.marxmail.org

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