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Male pregnancy

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Pregnant male seahorse

Male pregnancy is the incubation of one or more embryos or fetuses by organisms of the male sex in some species. Most species that reproduce by sexual reproduction are heterogamousfemales producing larger gametes (ova) and males producing smaller gametes (sperm). In nearly all animal species, offspring are carried by the female until birth, but in fish of the family Syngnathidae (pipefish, seahorses and the leafy seadragon), males perform that function.[1]

In animals

Syngnathidae family

The fish family Syngnathidae has the unique characteristic of a highly derived form of male brood care referred to as "male pregnancy".[2] The family is highly diverse, containing around 300 different species of fish. Included in Syngnathidae are seahorses, the pipefish, and the weedy and leafy seadragons. The males of some of these species possess a brood pouch on the trunk or tail; in other species, the eggs are merely attached to the male's trunk or tail when the female lays them. Although biologists' definitions of pregnancy somewhat differ, all members of the family are considered by ichthyologists to display male pregnancy, even those without an external brood pouch.

Fertilization may take place in the pouch or in the water before implantation, but in either case, syngnathids' male pregnancy ensures them complete confidence of paternity.[3] After implantation in or on the brood pouch or brood patch, the male incubates the eggs. Many species osmoregulate the brood pouch fluid to maintain proper pH for the developing embryos. In at least some species, the male also provisions his offspring with nutrients such as glucose and amino acids through the highly vascularized attachment sites in or on his body.

This period of incubation can take much longer than the production of another clutch of eggs by the female, especially in temperate regions where pregnancies last longer,[4] leading to a reproductive environment in which sexual selection can be stronger on females than on males due to increased male parental investment. This reversal of traditional sex roles has only been found in pipefishes, whereas seahorses have largely been accepted as monogamous.[5] Some pipefish species display classical polyandry because of this unique situation. Male syngnathids usually prefer females with large body size and prominent ornaments such as blue skin pigmentation or skin folds. Syngnathid males in some species are apparently capable of absorbing eggs or embryos while in the brood pouch.[6] In these cases, embryos with the highest survival rate are those whose mothers display the preferred phenotype.

Syngnathidae is the only family in the animal kingdom to which the term "male pregnancy" has been applied.[1]

Other animals

In 2021, Chinese researchers at the Naval Medical University in Shanghai published a preprint of a study that attempted to impregnate male rats, using parabiosis with female rats. Each male rat was castrated, surgically joined to a female, and given a transplanted uterus. The researchers then implanted embryos in both the uterus of the male and female parabionts. Pregnancies were allowed to develop until two days before the end of a full term, and were terminated by ceasarian section. The researchers studied 46 such parabiotic pairs. In over half of the pairs, neither the male nor female became pregnant with normal embryos; in about one-third of the pairs, only the female became thus pregnant; and in six pairs, both the female and male became pregnant. There were no pairs in which only the male parabiont rat became pregnant.[7] The study attracted much attention and controversy, with some researchers questioning the utility of such research, and others raising questions of bioethics issues.[8][9][10]

In 2023, Japanese scientists used skin cells from 2 male mice to create eggs and fathered a litter of seven babies.[11] The eggs were implanted in surrogate female mice.[11] The current downside is the success rate is 1% (7 mice were born out of 630 attempts).[11] This milestone in reproductive biology was published in Nature and should open more reproductive possibilities in the future.[11] The team was led by developmental biologist Katsuhiko Hayashi of the Osaka and Kyushu universities.[11]

In humans

Ectopic implant

Mammalian males, including humans, do not possess a uterus to gestate offspring.[1] The theoretical issue of male ectopic pregnancy (pregnancy outside the uterine cavity) by surgical implantation has been addressed by experts in the field of fertility medicine, who stress that the concept of ectopic implantation, while theoretically plausible, has never been attempted and would be difficult to justify – even for a woman lacking a uterus – owing to the extreme health risks to both the parent and child.[12][13]

Robert Winston, a pioneer of in-vitro fertilization, told London's Sunday Times that "male pregnancy would certainly be possible" by having an embryo implanted in a man's abdomen – with the placenta attached to an internal organ such as the bowel – and later delivered surgically.[14][15][16] Ectopic implantation of the embryo along the abdominal wall, and resulting placenta growth would, however, be very dangerous and potentially fatal for the host, and is therefore unlikely to be studied in humans.[14][17] Gillian Lockwood, medical director of Midland Fertility Services, a British fertility clinic, noted that the abdomen has not evolved to separate from the placenta during delivery, hence the danger of an ectopic pregnancy. Bioethicist Glenn McGee said "the question is not 'Can a man do it?'. It's 'If a man does have a successful [ectopic] pregnancy, can he survive it?'"[15]

Since 2000, several hoax web sites have appeared on the Internet[17] purporting to describe the world's first pregnant man. While some rely on legitimate scientific claims, no such experiment has ever been reported. Fertility clinician Cecil Jacobson claimed to have transplanted a fertilized egg from a female baboon to the omentum in the abdominal cavity of a male baboon in the mid-1960s, which then carried the fetus for four months; however, Jacobson did not publish his claims in a scientific journal, and was subsequently convicted on several unrelated counts of fraud for ethical misconduct.[13]

Uterus transplantation

Transplanting a uterus into a male body poses a challenge due to the lack of natural ligaments, vasculature, and hormones required to support the uterus. The uterus would either have to be donated by a willing donor or be tissue-engineered using the male's stem cells and then implanted into the pelvic region.[18] Afterward, an in vitro fertilisation (IVF) procedure would be followed to insert the embryo into the male's transplanted womb.

In 1931, Lili Elbe (identified male at birth) underwent a uterus transplant in an attempt to achieve pregnancy, but died of complications following the procedure.[19][20]

Books

Some science fiction writers have picked up on these issues, in "cross-gender" themes—e.g., Octavia E. Butler's Bloodchild and Other Stories.[clarification needed]

Ursula K. Le Guin's novel The Left Hand of Darkness contains the sentence "The king was pregnant", and explores a society in which pregnancy can be experienced by anyone, since individuals are not sexually differentiated during most of their life and can become capable of inseminating or gestating at different times.

Lois McMaster Bujold's Ethan of Athos features an all-male society in which men use artificial wombs, but experience many of the psychological effects of pregnancy (anticipation, anxiety, etc.).

In Marge Piercy's feminist utopian novel Woman on the Edge of Time, neither men nor women get pregnant, leaving that to artificial wombs, but both sexes may lactate and nurse the infant; the specifically female experiences of pregnancy and nursing were opened to men in the cause of gender equality.[21]

Larry Niven's 1969 essay "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex" ends with considering Superman as a carrier for his own baby, due to the difficulties a human female might encounter carrying a superpowered fetus. In A True Story by Lucian of Samosate, there are no women on the moon, and as such boys below 25 are considered wives bearing children in their calves.

Film

The concept of male pregnancy has been the subject of popular films, generally as a comedic device.

The 1978 comedy film Rabbit Test stars Billy Crystal as a young man who inexplicably becomes pregnant instead of his female sex partner.

The 1990 BBC television comedy drama Frankenstein's Baby features a Dr. Eva Frankenstein helping a male patient to become the “world's first” pregnant man.[22]

The 1994 science fiction comedy/drama Junior stars Arnold Schwarzenegger as a fertility researcher who experiments on himself; the screenplay was inspired by a 1985 article in Omni magazine.[13]

The 2015 romantic comedy Paternity Leave explores the concept of a gay couple surprised with a miraculous pregnancy in feature length.

The 2017 film Mamaboy stars Sean O'Donnell as a teenager who decides to undergo an experimental procedure that enables him to carry his girlfriend's baby to term.

In 2019, as a social commentary on the issue of abortion, The Blacklist had an episode which had anti-abortion men being kidnapped and forced to be pregnant. One stayed consistent with their belief and gave birth while the other became hypocritical and sought to get an abortion despite it being illegal in their state.

In April 2020, an independent film Three Pregnant Men was released on Gumroad in the form of a mock documentary following three of the eponymous pregnant men who have become part of an experimental project with a less than ethical corporation. When news of their pregnancy is leaked, each of them are put in jeopardy in different ways, allowing the film to explore gender norms, gay rights in Middle Eastern countries, racism/xenophobia, male privilege, and the power of corporations vs bodily autonomy.

Horror rarely dips into male pregnancy in depth. Minor appearances exist in the well-known Alien series, in which the first chestburster appears, as a result of the host organism using human bodies to gestate its young. While this concept is repeated and parodied widely, the origin is as much sci-fi as it is horror. In the 2019 anthology film The Mortuary Collection, a predatory fraternity brother named Jake has sex with a woman, using stealthing to trick her into having sex with him without a condom. As a result, her young grows in him rapidly over the course of a day, resulting in his bloody death when the child emerges. In 2020, the horror film Amulet depicts a soldier returning from war to live in a claustrophobic house with a woman and her mother, and a dark presence that may be lurking there as well. Like the former movie, male pregnancy serves as a sort of punishment for a man's sins.

Television

The concept appears frequently as a comedic gag in numerous television programs as well.

In a 1981 episode of the Canadian sketch comedy series Bizarre, the show’s resident daredevil character Super Dave Osborne (Bob Einstein) performs, as one of his many stunts, carrying and giving birth to a baby.

In the BBC science fiction comedy series Red Dwarf, the main character Dave Lister becomes pregnant after having sex with a female version of himself in an alternate universe.

In an episode of Sliders, the quartet "slides" into an alternate world in which babies develop during their final months in the father because a worldwide disease has kept women from being able to carry children beyond their first trimester.

In the popular fantasy series Charmed's fifth season, during a dream spell gone wrong, Leo ends up pregnant with Piper's baby for a good deal of the episode, leading to her referring to him as an "incubator" and at times berating him for "upsetting the baby".

The possibility of extraterrestrial life having different reproductive sexuality is the basis for many references. In the Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Unexpected", Trip Tucker becomes pregnant with the offspring of a female of another species. In the video game The Sims 2 male characters can be impregnated via cheat codes or alien abduction. In the American Dad! episode "Deacon Stan, Jesus Man", the boy Steve becomes impregnated after giving the mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to the extraterrestrial Roger, then unwittingly passes it on to his girlfriend via a kiss. In the animated series Futurama, the extraterrestrial Kif can be impregnated by a touch. In Doctor Who (series 11), an episode features an alien man going into labor. In the SciFi Channel miniseries, Farscape: The Peacekeeper Wars, the extraterrestrial Rygel becomes impregnated with human John and Aeryn's baby. In the series Alien Nation, when Tectonese main character George Francisco and his wife Susan decide to have a third child, it is revealed that, in order to conceive, a Tectonese couple needs a third party, called a binnaum, to complete impregnation, and that the male carries the baby—encased in a pod—during the final months of gestation. In the animated series The Fairly OddParents in the TV film Fairly OddBaby, the fairy Cosmo was pregnant with Baby Poof. Additionally, Robert Sheckley's 1989 short story Love Song From the Stars also contains this element. My Friends from Afar, a science fiction Singaporean drama series, Xiang Lin becomes pregnant to his surprise by kissing Tianning and his pregnancy provides an ongoing plotline in the latter half of the series. However, after he gives birth, it turns out that his species gives birth to eggs, which hatch, after some time, a child that appears to be roughly four years old.[citation needed]

The manga series Kentaro Hiyama's First Pregnancy takes place in the future where men are suddenly capable of becoming pregnant, though it is only a 10% chance of happening. The series explores the workplace prejudice that men and women experience and the titular character's efforts to change public opinion once he himself becomes pregnant.

Other

Virgil Wong, a performance artist, created a hoax site[17][23] featuring a fictitious male pregnancy, claiming to detail the pregnancy of his friend Lee Mingwei.[24][25][26]

Male pregnancy is also commonly explored in hentai, the subgenre of speculative erotic fiction known as the Omegaverse, and slash (homosexual) fan fiction, usually based upon fantasy series such as Supernatural or Harry Potter.[27][26]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Jones AG, Avise JC (2003-10-14). "Male pregnancy". Curr. Biol. 13 (20): R791. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2003.09.045. PMID 14561416.
  2. ^ Wilson, A. B.; Orr, J.W. (2011). "The evolutionary origins of Syngnathidae: pipefishes and seahorses". Journal of Fish Biology. 78 (6): 1603–1623. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2011.02988.x. PMID 21651519.
  3. ^ Mobley, Kenyon B.; Small, C. M. & Adam G. Jones (June 2011). "The genetics and genomics of Syngnathidae: pipefishes, seahorses and seadragons". Journal of Fish Biology. 78 (6): 1624–1646. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.717.9398. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2011.02967.x. PMID 21651520.
  4. ^ Wilson, A. B.; I. Ahnesjo; A. Vincent; A. Meyer (2003). "The dynamics of male brooding, mating patterns, and sex roles in pipefishes and seahorses (family syngnathidae)". Evolution. 57 (6): 1374–1386. doi:10.1111/j.0014-3820.2003.tb00345.x. PMID 12894945.
  5. ^ Berglund, A; G. Rosenqvist (2003). Sex role reversal in pipefish. Vol. 32. pp. 131–167. doi:10.1016/s0065-3454(03)01003-9. ISBN 9780120045327. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  6. ^ Sagebakken, Gry; Ingrid Ahnesjo; Kenyon B. Mobley; Ines Braga Goncalves; Charlotta Kvarnemo (2009-11-25). "Brooding fathers, not siblings, take up nutrients from embryos". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 277 (1683): 971–977. doi:10.1098/rspb.2009.1767. PMC 2842728. PMID 19939847.
  7. ^ "Study that Impregnated Male Rats Stirs Controversy". The Scientist.
  8. ^ "Heated debate in China over 'pregnant male rat' study". South China Morning Post. 19 June 2021. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  9. ^ "Study that Impregnated Male Rats Stirs Controversy". The Scientist.
  10. ^ Mallapaty, Smriti (9 July 2021). "'Pregnant' male rat study kindles bioethical debate in China". Nature. 595 (7868): 481. Bibcode:2021Natur.595..481M. doi:10.1038/d41586-021-01885-0. PMID 34244686. S2CID 235787261.
  11. ^ a b c d e Daniel Lawler (March 15, 2023). "'Revolutionary': Scientists create mice with two fathers". Archived from the original on March 23, 2023.
  12. ^ William Leith (2008-04-10). "Pregnant men: hard to stomach?". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 2008-12-05.
  13. ^ a b c Dick Teresi (1994-11-27). "How to Get a Man Pregnant". The New York Times Magazine.
  14. ^ a b "Babies borne by men 'possible'". The Independent. 1999-02-22.
  15. ^ a b Meryl Rothstein (2005-07-31). "Male Pregnancy: A Dangerous Proposition". Popular Science. Archived from the original on 2007-10-15.
  16. ^ Men can have babies; Study still in infancy though: Expert Archived 2009-03-09 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ a b c "A Womb of His Own". Snopes.com. 2008-05-09.
  18. ^ Rowe, Aaron (April 27, 2009). "The Future of Reproduction: Male Pregnancy". Upstart Business Journal. The Business Journals. Archived from the original on 2016-11-07.
  19. ^ Harrod, Horatia (25 April 2016). "THE TRAGIC TRUE STORY BEHIND THE DANISH GIRL". The Telegraph. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  20. ^ Charlotte, K.; Hvidfeldt, M.K. (2012). K&K 113: Fertilitet, teknologi og globalisering (in Danish). Aarhus University Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-87-7124-181-5. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
  21. ^ Piercy, Marge (1985-11-12). Woman on the Edge of Time. Fawcett. ISBN 978-0-449-21082-6.
  22. ^ "Frankenstein's Baby". BFI. Archived from the original on 2009-01-29.
  23. ^ "Virgil Wong website". Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  24. ^ Hoax website: "POP! The First Human Male Pregnancy". Retrieved 2008-03-27.
  25. ^ Lee Mingwei. Mingwei Archived 2008-06-19 at the Wayback Machine Refers to hoax as "Male Pregnancy Project, Centre d’Art Santa Monica, Barcelona, Spain"
  26. ^ a b Ingram-Waters, Mary C. (2008). Unnatural Babies: Cultural Conceptions of Deviant Procreations. University of California, Santa Barbara. ISBN 9780549700333.
  27. ^ Astrom, Berit (2010). "Transformative Works and Cultures". Transformative Works and Cultures. 4 (4). doi:10.3983/twc.2010.0135.