Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Earth United States Science Technology

Cesarean Births Could Be Affecting Human Evolution, Study Says (bbc.com) 277

CanadianRealist writes: Larger babies delivered by cesarean section may be affecting human evolution. Researchers estimate cases where the baby cannot fit down the birth canal have increased from 30 in 1,000 in the 1960s to 36 in 1,000 births today, [according to estimates from researchers at the University of Vienna in Austria.] Science Alert reports: "In the past, larger babies and mothers with narrow pelvis sizes might both have died in labour. Thanks to C-sections, that's now a lot less likely, but it also means that those 'at risk' genes from mothers with narrow pelvises are being carried into future generations. More detailed studies would be required to actually confirm the link between C-sections and evolution, as all we have now is a hypothesis based on the birth data." Agreed, more studies required part. Cesareans may simply be becoming more common with "too large" defined as cesarean seems like a better idea. It's reasonable to pose the question based simply on an understanding of evolution. Like it's reasonable to conjecture that length of human pregnancy is a compromise between further development in utero, and chance of mother and baby surviving the delivery.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Cesarean Births Could Be Affecting Human Evolution, Study Says

Comments Filter:
  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @06:22AM (#53445169) Homepage

    Well 0.36/0.30 = 20% growth and it's only been ~2 generations, if you consider that most of the 3% in one generation will have kids with the other 97% in the next generation it seems unlikely to happen this fast. It's probable that it's more routine and we're more cautious today, so borderline cases get the surgery now where they wouldn't in the past.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Are there alternate explanations that also fit the trend? Many mothers are more careful about their health habits during pregnancy now than in the past, in large part due to a better understanding of what is helpful and harmful to the unborn child. Access to better prenatal care also certainly has improved the health of unborn children. Unhealthy babies often are smaller than healthy babies, and if there are fewer unhealthy babies now, then it follows that the average weight would increase. Although not hea

  • by bigHairyDog ( 686475 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @06:28AM (#53445179)

    Babies have been getting bigger for a long time.

    This is well documented in medical literature:

    - "These findings suggest that US and Canadian babies are getting bigger" https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov]
    - "We conclude that Canadian infants are getting bigger" https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov]
    - "Results presented in this study demonstrate that even when migratory effects are eliminated, a secular increase in birth weight is observed" https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov]

    • rGBH hormone residues fed to make cows produce more milk being consumed by humans.

      So glad I'm vegan.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 08, 2016 @07:52AM (#53445361)

        Why? Are you scared of becoming a big baby?

      • by Bongo ( 13261 )

        Lierre Keith makes a good point, that returning to natural grazing cows would be a huge benefit for the environment. Yes, I'm a methane fart denier. But her concern is with biodiversity, and all that tofu and grain is coming from stripping the land back to monocultures. I'm all for eating meat grown in a lab, if needed, but as humans, we have small digestive systems and big brains, and we didn't evolve that way eating veggies. But that's evolution for you, a lot of trial and error. Like this with the babies

        • by execthis ( 537150 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:29AM (#53445433)

          The first hominid ancestors to us whose brains quickly developed much larger were avid seafood eaters. There are a number of telltale biological clues to this in our physiology, including the fact that our bodies don't manufacture DHA yet our brains and nervous systems require high levels of it. Also DHA is passed through the placenta to the fetus implying that the ancestors had an abundant supply of it in their diet.

          • by Bongo ( 13261 )

            Thanks, interesting. I'm an avid meat and seafood eater, so I'm kinda vague with the term "meat". Another interesting point is the biomechanics of our lower leg and foot, which make us efficient runners -- not fast runners, just efficient -- which with the loss of hair, for sweating and cooling, makes us good for endurance running and running down large animals. Well, I wish, being at a desk all day. Anyway, it would be interesting how we actually got the initial start, whether it was on the savannah, or li

            • Probably some combination of both.

              If you can withstand often breathless and hyperbolic writing, I do recommend the book Born to Run, that discusses the idea that homo sapiens, in particular, are the supreme runners at long distance at moderate speeds, for the purposes of running down prey to death, which is a very effective hunting method in hot & dry climates when you have not developed good hunting weapons yet. I believe the conclusions are largely correct.

              However, there is another tale that suggests

          • The first hominid ancestors to us whose brains quickly developed much larger were avid seafood eaters.

            They were also avid fruit eaters (we can't make vitamin C) and avid starchy vegetable eaters (unlike our closest relatives, we can digest starch).

            • Thanks, I didn't know that about starch digestion. [nature.com] Brings me back to Jared Diamond's book "The Third Chimpanzee" which theorized that the need to consume tubers was a major driver in human divergence from other apes. Heck, starch might even have been mentioned in that book but I don't remember it.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          All this just reminds me how badly human beings are designed. Intelligent design my arse.

        • There's an interesting TED Talk about our microbial colonies [youtube.com] by Rob Knight, He talks about the "clean" via cesarean issue you mention.

      • rGBH hormone residues fed to make cows produce more milk being consumed by humans.

        So glad I'm vegan.

        Why?

        • Because I don't consume growth hormone residues in my diet, so long as the fecal runoff water from factory farms doesn't get into the fields where my veggies grow.

          • Because I don't consume growth hormone residues in my diet, so long as the fecal runoff water from factory farms doesn't get into the fields where my veggies grow.

            So, totally off-topic then? We're talking about babies and birth. You're talking about perceived health benefits.

            • If mothers consume dairy products with hormone residues their babies will be bigger, hence the increased need for C sections...

              • If mothers consume dairy products with hormone residues their babies will be bigger, hence the increased need for C sections...

                But you aren't either mother or baby. All you are doing is virtue-signalling.

                • Having an oversized body as a consequence of a lifetime diet of growth-hormone-tainted food is a deformity. There are a lot of grotesque deformities now because of various adverse dietary and environmental factors which have been considered acceptable, usually for reasons of profit.

                  • by sinij ( 911942 )
                    Do you have any studies to support your 'residual livestock hormones - larger humans' assertion?
      • If people stopped drinking milk many breeds of cow would go extinct. They have no natural habitat. It's a good job some people aren't vegan to help prevent the extinction of the poor domestic cow.

        / I'm being semi-facetious

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Q: What's the easiest way to tell if someone is a vegan?

        A: Just wait, they'll tell you.

    • Man has discovered (created?) a new tool - and humans are taking advantage of it. Discovery or creation of tools have aligned with rapid growth of humans before.

      Fire, Hammers, the Wheel, Machines, Beer, now this.

      Therefore it stands to reason that bigger children will emerge through the use of this tool.

  • Newborns are so selfish that they don't have the *courtesy* to be born in business hours. Inconsiderate little brats.

    • That's why approve of corporal punishment for newborns born outside business hours.

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )
        Look the doctor has to get to the golf game and these "babies" have to plan their life better. They're so drunk they can't even walk.
  • Its everywhere (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Cesarean Births, Insulin and condoms may be affecting evolution...news at 11.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @06:52AM (#53445223) Homepage Journal

      Yes. A study done at the University of Dublin concluded that if your parents didn't have any children you probably won't either.

    • The answer is yes. A lot of negative genes that would have resulted in a person not reaching reproductive age are being propagated whereas they might have died out if we were less advanced. Negative mutations in our genomes are not being removed like they once were.

      It is theoretically possible that 200,000 years from now, humans would be completely genetically unviable without technology. (although technology will probably remove the bad mutations long before then in the real world).

      Part of what the Naz

      • They were on their way to inventing Hitlerian births
      • A lot of negative genes that would have resulted in a person not reaching reproductive age are being propagated whereas they might have died out if we were less advanced.

        I guess that explains the dramatic rise in the number of plain old fucking stupid people I've started encountering as my life goes on.

        Seriously, there really seems to be MANY more of them around these days.

        • A lot of negative genes that would have resulted in a person not reaching reproductive age are being propagated whereas they might have died out if we were less advanced.

          I guess that explains the dramatic rise in the number of plain old fucking stupid people I've started encountering as my life goes on.

          Seriously, there really seems to be MANY more of them around these days.

          It's way too hard to win a Darwin Award these days.

  • Is age a factor? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @07:12AM (#53445277)

    Previous generations and marriages gave birth to a more traditional (old-fashioned?) household, where the father was the only provider, and the mother stayed home to raise children, starting at a young age (late teens/early 20s). Compare and contrast this to what we see today as more of the average, where both adults perhaps go to school, start careers, spend time traveling the world, and then start considering marriage and a family in their late 20's/early 30's.

    And this is not meant to sound mean or degrading, but we humans don't exactly shrink in size as we get older, thus making pregnancy and childbirth that much harder on a human body that may be leaning more towards the overweight or obese range. Perhaps mentally, the ideal age to become a parent is mid-30s due to maturity/wisdom/financial status/etc, but from a purely physical standpoint, childbirth is likely ideal at a much younger age, which a younger body may provide a bit more flexibility when it comes to childbirth.

    • Re:Is age a factor? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Rande ( 255599 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:17AM (#53445413) Homepage

      I've heard quite a few women look down on mothers who chose to have children at 18 or 19 - either for being considered feckless scroungers bleeding the social system dry or for not being feminist enough and having a full career first.

      I think 18 is a very good age to have children. Straight after high school and it's not too late to go on to college at around 22ish. Admittedly you'd need a lot of family support, which is a good thing no matter what your age.

      • I've heard quite a few women look down on mothers who chose to have children at 18 or 19 - either for being considered feckless scroungers bleeding the social system dry or for not being feminist enough and having a full career first.

        Well, bleeding the social system can definitely have arguments against the idea of having children at an early age, but I think that particular factor has more to do with society looking down upon women who literally have many children for the sole purpose of increasing a welfare check. Unfortunately, society also has a hand in looking down upon young mothers for not "prioritizing" a career first. In the meantime, we wonder why so many kids grow up having more of a relationship with the daycare workers th

  • It's not evolution. Unless you consider operating theatres to be symbiotic. Take the surgery out, would the resulting deaths be considered devolution?

    • Evolution is not linear and does not mean "improving". Evolution merely means a general change in gene frequencies over time. In terms of biology there is no such thing as "devolution". The increase in frequency of a trait that one might perceive as "negative" is still "evolution".

    • It might be evolution, however it is not evolution by natural selection.

  • dogs did this (Score:5, Interesting)

    by deadweight ( 681827 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:18AM (#53445417)
    Some breeds of dogs, bulldogs maybe?, HAVE to be born via C-section. The puppies can no longer fit the natural way.
  • by Bearhouse ( 1034238 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:23AM (#53445427)

    Medical liability cases are increasing around the world, and the cost of insurance is driving many people from the profession. (See articles)
    My wife wanted to give birth at home, it was both very difficult to organise and extremely costly.
    All her friends said she was mad; plan the date with your Dr. for a C-section, fast, painless and no stress waiting for contractions to start.
    It's as much a matter of convenience for both sides as a question of baby size IMHO.

    http://www.medscape.com/viewar... [medscape.com]

    http://www.spiegel.de/internat... [spiegel.de]

  • De-evolution (Score:4, Insightful)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:41AM (#53445459)

    We have been de-evolving for a long time now. Lots and lots of "defective" people are living to reproduce who would have died without medical science (I am one of them). This ends up making the species genetically more poor each time.

    • Re:De-evolution (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:47AM (#53445479)
      Properly speaking, there is no such thing as de-evolution. Evolutionary pressure optimizes for survival in some particular environment, and nothing more. In this case, the particular environment is changing to one that includes medical science, so certain types of genetic specialization is no longer needed. People don't de-evolve more than bacteria de-evolve when they lose antibiotic resistance due to a lack of antibiotics :)
    • since evolution at that scale is hard to predict. There are other factors at play (e.g. how many children you have, your level of intelligence and other abilities, whether you're children will have the same troubles you have, etc, etc).

      Idiocracy was funny and all, but it's not science. And speaking of science, the human body is a machine, and we're capable of fully understanding it if we try. Maybe not in your lifetime or mine, but soon. Now, if we can just get the damn anti-science folks clamped down be
    • by rizole ( 666389 )
      Genetically more diverse more like. Genes can only be poor (provide a disadvantage) in context. When society selects for genes that nature would normally select out then those gene confer an advantage. Who knows, when the zombie apocalypse comes, the "defect" you have might end up saving the human race.
  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:49AM (#53445483)
    Anything that affects mate selection affects evolution... Mundane things such as wearing makup and shaving body hair are probably affecting evolution.
  • Flawed conclusions (Score:3, Informative)

    by JoePete ( 4714549 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:54AM (#53445503)
    This study appears to have multiple flaws: 1) A statistical increase in Caesareans does not mean a statistical narrowing of the pelvis. There is not a causal relationship. This is like suggesting that because relatively fewer people are having their wisdom teeth extracted today, our mouths must be getting bigger. 2) Even with a correlation between pelvis width and Caesareans, it does not mean those children or mothers would have died in non-surgical child birth. This is creating a binary relationship out of a correlation - or in other terms assuming the absence of a negative is a positive. Other factors: - The general guideline today (as I understand it) is that if you have had a Caesarean in the past it is safer to have Caesareans for future babies - this alone might account for the statistical increase. - Larger babies can be attributed to better prenatal health and nutrition. - The increase in Caesareans can be attributed to more women giving birth in a hospital setting where Caesarean is an available and safe option.
  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:58AM (#53445507)
    There's no evidence. This is click-bait bullshit.
  • Isolate the genes causing problems in delivery and repair them. Larger humans is a good thing, it indicates greater development and will likely be key to our self-direct evolution as masters of both Earth and the galaxy.

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

Working...