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Why Do Humans Kiss? To Share Our Germs

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It doesn’t matter how many times you got the cootie shot on the playground; when you kiss another person, you’re going mouth-to-mouth with their germs. And according to researchers, those kissing germs are extremely important to human reproduction.

Researchers at the University of Leeds report that kissing plays an important role in human reproduction. It’s not just that kissing can eventually lead to the reproductive act; it’s the germs that come with that comes with swapping spit. Perhaps most importantly, when a man kisses a female partner, he passes a small amount of his cytomegalovirus to her. If the cytomegalovirus is introduced into a woman’s system during pregnancy, it can damage or even potentially kill the fetus. But, if a woman kisses the same partner repeatedly, she eventually develops an immunity to his particular cytomegalovirus, decreasing the chances of infection during pregnancy. The study authors say that six months of kissing should yield optimum immunity.

It’s just as well, then, that the whole cootie shot thing was a sham.

[Daily Mail via Popular Science]

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