It’s the testosterone, don’t you know.
Years
ago when I was conducting my doctoral research on the evolutionary
history of men among a remote indigenous community of hunter-gatherers
living in the forests of South America, I came across a man donning a
well-worn baseball cap likely donated by missionaries. The cap read,
“There are three stages to a man’s life: Stud, Dud, Thud.” Indeed. It is
somewhat sobering to see one’s life’s research summarized on a piece of
headwear that can probably be found for a few dollars at a roadside
truck stop. But such is the elegance of interesting science.
It’s no secret that mortality due to accidents and risky
behavior is much higher in young men, particularly those in their late
teenage years and early 20s. This, by the way, is not news to insurance
companies. It’s also true that men die earlier than women, regardless of
their environment or lifestyle, and are often more susceptible to some
cancers and heart disease at an earlier age. In fact, men are at a
higher risk than women when it comes to most of the top 15 contributing
sources of mortality in the United States—which account for nearly 80
percent of all deaths.
In the words of a Yale evolutionary biologist, “Macho makes you sick.”
Evolutionary factors are clearly at play. The question is why.
What is natural selection’s deal with men? It’s a compelling academic
question, for sure. But now that I’m in my 50s, I have to admit the
issue of aging gets more relevant with every new gray hair.
As it turns out, shorter lifespans and higher male mortality
risk are quite common in many species. Natural selection doesn’t
necessarily favor traits commonly associated with health, vigor, and
longevity. Instead, it promotes characteristics that provide greater
lifetime reproductive success, or in the parlance of evolutionary
biology, fitness. If the benefits of increased fitness are greater than
the cost of a shorter lifespan or poor health, biology will prioritize
those traits. In essence, sex trumps birthday candles.
This trade off between longevity and reproduction takes an
obvious form in women: Pregnancy, childbirth, and lactation are all
physically taxing and energetically costly. Research has shown that
bearing more children is associated with higher oxidative stress, which
can in turn lead to accelerated aging in post-menopausal women.1
A 2006 historical study of rural Polish women, for example, found a
correlation between having more children and a significantly shorter
post-menopausal lifespan.2 Although more research needs to be done, it would seem that reproductive effort can literally take years off your life.
But what about men? While they obviously don’t bear the costs of
pregnancy, they do still allocate a great deal of energy—also to their
own detriment later in life—to improve their chances of reproduction.
This “reproductive effort” takes place through engagement in riskier
behavior and the accumulation of greater body mass, particularly
sexually dimorphic skeletal muscle mass, the extra male-specific muscle
in the shoulders, back, and arms. The metabolic costs of maintaining
this muscle in men over a lifetime are comparable to the energy
expenditure women experience during pregnancy and breast-feeding, but
they and their associated health challenges are somewhat manageable.
After all, it would be a good idea to evolve physiological mechanisms to
manage the tradeoffs that result from the often conflicting needs of
body functions. Hormones are one of the most vital agents in managing
these tradeoffs. In men, testosterone regulates investment in muscle and
reproductive behavior. But like everything else, it, too, has its
price.
Testosterone is often described as the male sex
hormone. Women also produce testosterone, but in much smaller amounts.
Aside from its sexual effects such as stimulating beard growth and
deeper voices, testosterone is an important anabolic hormone that has a
significant impact on the energetic costs in men. That is, it promotes
anabolism, or muscle-building, and increases metabolism, the rate at
which that muscle burns calories. Testosterone also promotes the burning
of fat tissue. And yes, it can also boost libido and mood. So
testosterone does a lot of things that sound healthy—but it can be a
double-edged sword.
Burning fat may make you look better in the mirror, for
instance, but in the wild, less fat makes you more vulnerable to food
shortfalls and infection. This is apparent in many organisms, whose
acute rises in testosterone signal an increase in reproductive effort,
only to cause challenges to other physiological demands related to
well-being. Take the northern quoll (Dasyurus hallucatus), a
medium-sized Australian marsupial. Male quolls experience a dramatic
one-time rise in testosterone that triggers intense bouts of mating—and
very high mortality due to male/male aggression and fat depletion.
Females live up to three years, whereas males are lucky to make it a
year. As ecologist Jaime Heiniger so eloquently states, “It could likely
be that they [males] shag themselves to death.”3
The cap read, “There are three stages to a man’s life: Stud, Dud, Thud.”
To get a better picture, then, scientists have had to examine
the effects of testosterone supplementation in “intact” males as well.
Ornithologists have shown that experimentally increasing testosterone
levels often improves a male bird’s ability to establish multiple nests,
ward off competitors, and father more offspring compared to
unsupplemented males.6 Moreover, males that have naturally
high testosterone levels exhibit the same advantages. If testosterone is
so beneficial for reproductive fitness, then why don’t all males
maintain such high testosterone levels? Again: There are costs. While
testosterone-supplemented male birds had greater reproductive fitness,
they also exhibited compromised survivorship. Supplemented males put on
less fat and had a harder time making it through the breeding season.
Moving beyond birds, testosterone supplementation in otherwise
healthy men has become increasingly popular and could provide insights
into the tradeoffs between reproductive effort and longevity. Although
it is still too soon to determine whether men on testosterone have
shorter life spans, evidence is emerging. According to one 2014 study,
older men taking testosterone were more likely to experience an acute,
non-fatal myocardial infarction 90 days after the first prescription, as
compared with prior to the treatment.7 Higher testosterone
might be beneficial for muscle growth, but other organs in older men may
not be able to tolerate the metabolic burden. Clearly more research is
necessary.
As an ecologist eloquently states, male quolls, a small marsupial, “shag themselves to death.”
Testosterone doesn’t just cause metabolic changes: It’s also
responsible for significant immunological effects during a man’s
lifetime. In the words of Yale evolutionary biologist Stephen Stearns,
“Macho makes you sick.” Indeed, men often have a harder time than women
fighting off infections. There are several potential underlying causes
for these differences. Perhaps males are simply exposed to more
opportunities for infection than women are. Or it may be that men are at
a chemical disadvantage when it comes to fighting off infection—a
hypothesis for which there is mounting evidence. Testosterone suppresses
immune function, while estradiol, the primary sex steroid in women,
bolsters immune function. (The latter does, however, also increase
women’s risk of autoimmune disease—again, a compromise nature is willing
to make in return for estradiol’s beneficial role in reproduction.) In
wild bird, reptile, and mammal populations, testosterone has been found
to compromise immune function, and increase the severity of infection
and consequentially mortality. Whether this is true for humans remains
to be seen, but it seems to fit data collected from men living in
regions with high infection risk. In 2005, researchers conducting a
study in Honduras found that testosterone levels were lower in men with
malarial infections compared to uninfected individuals. When infected
men were treated, testosterone rebounded to levels exhibited by
uninfected controls.8
And infection isn’t the only kind of disease men have to worry
about. Testosterone and other sex hormones are also associated with
greater cancer risk, particularly when it comes to prostate cancer.
Populations with higher testosterone levels, for example, tend to also
exhibit higher incidence of prostate cancer.9 Once again, sex trumps candles.
So why do males tolerate the negative effects of testosterone?
The Darwinian explanation is that the potential reproductive payoffs are
huge in mammalian males compared to females. Mating opportunities are
an important constraint for male fitness. Hypothetically, a male mating
with 100 different females in a year could potentially father 100
offspring or more. The same is not true for females. The prevalence of
polygyny in mammals, other primates, and many human societies is
evidence of the influence of this difference in fitness constraints
between males and females. Women can also increase their fitness by
obtaining more mating opportunities, but not through bearing more
offspring. In essence, mammalian males are willing to deploy costly
hormones such as testosterone, invest in expensive tissue, and engage in
risky behavior because the potential fitness payoffs are so high.
This makes sense if you’re hominid living in the Pleistocene a
couple million years ago. But is this relevant for men today? Perhaps.
While humans are tremendously influenced by culture, the conditions of
natural selection—trait variation, trait heritability, and differential
reproductive success—are difficult to escape.
This does not mean, however, that men cannot evolve other
reproductive strategies. Despite their propensity to engage in risky
behavior and exhibit expensive, life-shortening physical traits, men
have evolved an alternative form of reproductive effort in the form of
paternal investment—something very rare in primates (and mammals in
general). For paternal investment to evolve, males have to make sure
they are around to take care of their offspring. Risky behavior and
expensive tissue have to take a backseat to investment that reflects
better health and perhaps prolongs lifespan. Indeed, men can exhibit
declines in testosterone and put on a bit of weight when they become
fathers and engage in paternal care.10, 11 Perhaps, then, fatherhood is good for health.
I doubt that natural selection is done with men, or humans, in
general. We may still endure shorter lifespans and worse health due to
our evolutionary history, but the essence of evolution is change over
time. At our core, humans are incredibly malleable. The physiology that
supports this malleability is probably why our species has evolved the
traits that define us: big, expensive brains; long lives; extended
childhood; offspring that require lots of care. It might also help
explain why there are over 7 billion of us. That is a lot of
reproductive fitness. Men have evolved novel reproductive strategies
such as paternal care that likely contributed to their evolutionary
success. But that doesn’t change the fact that they still require
testosterone to reproduce. It is unlikely they will ever do away with
the associated costs to lifespan and health—but that being said, it’s
certainly better than being a northern quoll. Although it is a hell of a
way to go.
- Richard G. Bribiescas is Professor of Anthropology and Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, and Deputy Provost for Faculty Development and Diversity, at Yale University. He is the author of How Men Age: What Evolution Reveals About Male Health and Mortality, and Men: Evolutionary and Life History, as well as numerous peer-reviewed articles on human evolutionary biology.
References
1. Ziomkiewicz, A., et al. Evidence for the cost of
reproduction in humans: High lifetime reproductive effort is associated
with greater oxidative stress in post-menopausal women. PLoS One 11, p. e0145753 (2016).
2. Jasienska, G., Nenko, I., & Jasienski, M. Daughters
increase longevity of fathers, but daughters and sons equally reduce
longevity of mothers. American Journal of Human Biology 18, 422-425 (2006).
3. Dunlevie, J. & Daly, N. Sex life of northern quolls: Reproduction rituals on Groote Eylandt exposed. www.abc.net (2014).
4. Wilson, J.D. & Roehrborn, C. Long-term consequences of
castration in men: Lessons from the Skoptzy and the eunuchs of the
Chinese and Ottoman courts. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 84, 4324-4331 (1999).
5. Min, K.J., Lee, C.K., & Park, H.N. The lifespan of Korean eunuchs. Current Biology 22, R792-793 (2012).
6. Reed, W.L., et al. Physiological effects on demography: A long-term experimental study of testosterone’s effects on fitness. The American Naturalist 167, 665-681 (2006).
7. Finkle, W.D., et al. Increased risk of non-fatal myocardial infarction following testosterone therapy prescription in men. PLoS One 9, e85805 (2014).
8. Muehlenbein, M.P., Alger, J., Cogswell, F., James, M., &
Krogstad, D. The reproductive endocrine response to Plasmodium vivax
infection in Hondurans. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 73, 178-187 (2005).
9. Calistro Alvarado, L. Population differences in the
testosterone levels of young men are associated with prostate cancer
disparities in older men. American Journal of Human Biology 22, 449-455 (2010).
10. Garfield, C.F., et al. Longitudinal Study of Body Mass Index in Young Males and the Transition to Fatherhood. American Journal of Men’s Health 10, NP158-NP167 (2015).
11. Gettler, L.T., McDade, T.W., Feranil, A.B., & Kuzawa,
C.W. Longitudinal evidence that fatherhood decreases testosterone in
human males. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108, 16194-16199 (2011).
Author: Richard G. Bribiescas
Original Source: https://getpocket.com/explore/item/why-men-don-t-live-as-long-as-women
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