DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The Y Chromosome Might Disappear: What That Actually Means

December 14, 2025
in News
The Y Chromosome Might Disappear: What That Actually Means

The Y chromosome keeps grabbing attention in evolutionary science. People often wonder if it is stable, shrinking, or on its way to disappearing. This debate continues because it balances solid research with humanity’s fascination with extinction theories.

The conversation exploded after evolutionary biologist Jenny Graves published a commentary in 2004 suggesting the Y had lost most of its ancestral genes over hundreds of millions of years. Her rough estimate proposed that, if that pace continued, the chromosome could eventually disappear.

That was enough to launch years of headlines about the “end of men,” even though Graves never suggested anything that extreme. “It really amazes me that anyone is concerned that men will become extinct in 5 or 6 million years,” she told ScienceAlert, pointing out that humans haven’t even existed for a fraction of that time.

The Y chromosome’s history is undeniably messy. It once carried about 800 genes but retains only a small fraction today. Other mammals have already reinvented their sex-determining systems. Some mole voles lost the Y chromosome altogether and shifted key genes to other chromosomes. Spiny rats did the same and continue reproducing without issue. Graves sees these examples as proof that if a more efficient sex gene emerges in humans, it could spread without changing the visible traits associated with being male. “Maybe it already has in some human population somewhere,” she said.

But another camp sees the Y as far from doomed. Evolutionary biologist Jenn Hughes at MIT’s Whitehead Institute found that the essential genes on the human Y have remained stable for roughly 25 million years. Later studies of primates strengthened her position. Hughes explained that the surviving Y genes play crucial roles throughout the body, which creates strong evolutionary pressure to preserve them. In her view, the Y isn’t fading. It’s holding steady.

Graves pushes back, arguing that stability doesn’t equal permanence. The Y is packed with repeated sequences that can slip or degrade over generations, and conserved genes can still be replaced under the right conditions. She describes the Y’s timeline as “anything from now to never.”

When Hughes and Graves debated the issue publicly in 2011, the audience split evenly. That’s where things remain. The Y chromosome may endure unchanged for millions of years, or evolution may hand its job to another gene someday. Either way, there’s no countdown clock, no crisis, and no reason for men to draft farewell letters.

The post The Y Chromosome Might Disappear: What That Actually Means appeared first on VICE.

Nvidia Will Spend $26 Billion to Build Open-Weight AI Models, Filings Show
News

Nvidia Will Spend $26 Billion to Build Open-Weight AI Models, Filings Show

by Wired
March 11, 2026

Nvidia will spend $26 billion over the next five years to build open source artificial intelligence models, according to a ...

Read more
News

The AI-Generated Tilly Norwood Just Dropped the Worst Music Video We’ve Ever Seen

March 11, 2026
News

You bet this is a war of choice. Just not America’s.

March 11, 2026
News

Angelika Saleh, the Angelika of Angelika Film Center, Dies at 90

March 11, 2026
News

Bruce Blakeman calls for public apology, Hochul state probe of NYC first lady Rama Duwaji’s ‘antisemitic rhetoric’

March 11, 2026
Hawaii Faces Flooding, Fierce Winds and Even Snow from a ‘High-Impact’ Storm

Hawaii Faces Flooding, Fierce Winds and Even Snow from a ‘High-Impact’ Storm

March 11, 2026
Why Hollywood cares about this year’s Oscars, but not about Gulf money buying Warner: A chat with insider Matt Belloni

Why Hollywood cares about this year’s Oscars, but not about Gulf money buying Warner: A chat with insider Matt Belloni

March 11, 2026
For Some Athletes, Major Sports Events Can Be an Opportunity to Defect

For Some Athletes, Major Sports Events Can Be an Opportunity to Defect

March 11, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026