Men with Smaller Testicles Predisposed to Hands-on Parenting, Study Suggests

Men with Smaller Testicles Predisposed to Hands-on Parenting

New research from Emory University has found that fathers with smaller testicles are more likely to be involved in the care and nurturing of their children, Medical Daily reported.  This is contrary to popular opinion, bigger may not always be better. According to lead author Dr. Jennifer Mascaro, the goal of the study was to find a biological mechanism that could potentially explain why some fathers devote more time to the parenting of their children than others. The relative size of a man’s testicles may influence the chances of him being a good father according to a study suggesting a biological basis for parenting abilities in men. Men with larger testes are significantly less likely to display good parenting skills compared to men with smaller testes because of a well-established trade-off in evolution between mating and child-rearing, scientists said.

Bigger May Not Always Better

Our study is the first to investigate whether human anatomy and brain function explain this variance in parenting effort,” Mascaro, an anthropologist and neuroscientist at Emory, said. In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Mascaro and her team recruited 70 fathers with newborns between the ages of 1 and 2 years old.  Both the dads and their children’s biological mothers were asked to complete surveys regarding the fathers’ involvement in hands-on childcare.

The researchers then tested the men’s testosterone levels, as lower levels of the sex hormone have been associated with greater parental involvement, according to Medical Daily.  The fathers also received MRI scans of their brains to measure activity in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), an area of the brain that governs reward and parental motivation.  MRI scans were also done on the men’s testes to measure volume. The fathers with smaller testicular volume had more brain activity in their VTAs and scored higher on the parenting surveys. Additionally, those with less testosterone had a modest association with better care giving, a finding the researchers linked with testicle size, since testosterone is produced in the testes

Though the results may seem concerning, the researchers emphasized that testicle size does not necessarily control a father’s parenting skills. “We’re assuming that testes size drives how involved the fathers are,” said Emory anthropologist Dr. James Rilling, whose lab led the study, “but it could also be that when men become more involved as caregivers, their testes shrink. Environmental influences can change biology.

Recent Articles:

Scroll to Top