There is nothing as romantic as two lovers
sharing a kiss.
But scientists have come up with an
evolutionary explanation which perhaps threatens to kill the passion.
Academics think that kissing helps partners
share bacteria, shoring up their immune systems and enabling them to better
fight disease.
As many as 80 million bacteria are
transferred during a ten-second kiss, according to Dutch biologists.
Sharing those germs means both partners are
equipped to ward off the infections they might introduce to each other later
on.
Humans carry trillions of bacteria in the
body, which together make up a ‘microbiota’ – a complex mix of bugs which play
a crucial role in digesting food and warding off infections.
Remco Kort, from the Netherlands
Organisation for Applied Scientific Research - or TNO - said his team set out
to discover the evolutionary reason for kissing.
After testing 21 couples, they think
kissing helps form a shared microbiota, a similar mix of bacteria living in the
body.
He said: ‘Intimate kissing involving full
tongue contact and saliva exchange appears to be a courtship behaviour unique
to humans and is common in over 90 per cent of known cultures.
‘Interestingly, the current explanations
for the function of intimate kissing in humans include an important role for
the microbiota present in the oral cavity, although to our knowledge, the exact
effects of intimate kissing on the oral microbiota have never been studied.
‘We wanted to find out the extent to which
partners share their oral microbiota, and it turns out, the more a couple kiss,
the more similar they are.’
The researchers, whose findings are
published in the journal Microbiome, found that couples who share nine intimate
kisses a day had a very similar microbiota, meaning they would be better
prepared to deal with similar infections and digest similar food.
Scientists have long warned that modern
obsession with hygiene and cleanliness has driven a boom in allergies and
health problems.
According to the ‘hygiene hypothesis’,
increasing prevalence of allergies such as asthma are caused because we are not
exposed to enough germs in our daily life.
Professor Graham Rook, an immunologist at
University College London, has gone so far as to say that picking food off the
floor, buying a dog and regularly kissing your relatives are some of the best
ways to ward off allergies.
Speaking at Cheltenham Science Festival
earlier this year, he advised that when a baby spits out its dummy, a mother
should lick it clean and put it back in the infant’s mouth.
He said the problem is that the modern body
is at a ‘constant state of alert’ because it is not used to living with germs.
‘When the immune system is not needed it
should get turned off completely,’ he said.
‘What happens these days is that often it
is on a constant state of alert and it is not turned off completely.
‘It will do something completely pointless
like attacking grass pollen wafting past in the breeze, or attacking the
neighbour’s cat when it happens to walk past, then you are going to have
allergic problems.’
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