Pollution harms men's fertility, but traffic noise affects women's

The large-scale study linked exposure to air pollution with a higher infertility risk in men, while traffic noise affected women

A foggy night view of a traffic jam
Pollution and traffic noise have both been tied to fertility issues, but the effects seem sex-dependent.
(Image credit: Jacek Dylag via Unsplash)

Roughly one in six people are affected by infertility worldwide.

And with more than half the world's population now living in urban areas, researchers are interested in whether living in noisy and polluted cities could be to blame.

Amy L. Winship
Group Leader and Senior Research Fellow, Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Monash University

Dr Amy Winship is a Rebecca Cooper Foundation Al & Val Rosenstrauss Fellow and Group Leader in reproductive biology at Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute.