Men and their
preference for younger female mates may have led to the phenomenon of menopause
in women, according to a controversial study by Canadian researchers published
this week.
WASHINGTON: Men and their preference for younger
female mates may have led to the phenomenon of menopause in women, according to
a controversial study by Canadian researchers published this week.
"If women were reproducing all along, and there
were no preference against older women, women would be reproducing like men are
for their whole lives," said evolutionary geneticist Rama Singh, a
professor at McMaster University.
Singh said the conventional "grandmother
theory," which holds that older women grow infertile so that they can
assist the survival of their kin by helping to raise their children's
offspring, did not make sense to him.
Instead of age leading to infertility, Singh theorised
that the dwindling pool of male mates for older women - because many older men
seek to mate with younger women - led to a lack of reproduction that gave rise
to menopause.
His work, backed up by computer models, suggests that
a male mating preference for younger females could have led to the accumulation
of genetic mutations that would harm female fertility and bring on menopause.
The study was published on Thursday in the
open-access, peer-reviewed journal PLOS Computational Biology.
But while the assertion raised many eyebrows, not all
experts are convinced by Singh, who questioned why menopause appears to be
mainly a human phenomenon.
"I cannot agree with the theory put forth,"
said Steven Goldstein, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at New York
University School of Medicine.
"There are other primates who do experience
menopause, although life expectancy after menopause is extremely limited,"
said Goldstein, who was not involved in the research.
"The same was true of humans until roughly the
1850s. In 1850 the average age of menopause was 46 and life expectancy was 50,
which more closely parallels that of chimpanzees or gorillas.
Rather, a more accurate explanation would be that
scientific advances like water purification and antibiotics have led to much
longer lives among humans, he said.
"The cessation of reproductive capabilities in
higher primates has always come shortly before the life span ends. It is only
the advances of modern society that have women living so very long," he
told AFP.
- AFP/fl
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