In recent years, the incidence of infertility has been on the rise significantly, and the increasingly harsh natural environment and various kinds of pollution may be the killers of fertility. The tremendous development of industrialization has brought temporary benefits to humans while lurking serious hazards. Every year, human beings release a large number of toxic chemicals into the environment, including endocrine disruptors, organic solvents, pesticides, heavy metals, etc. These environmental pollutants accumulate in humans and animals through the food chain, endangering not only human health in many ways, but also seriously affecting human reproduction. Infertility caused by environmental pollution has attracted widespread attention. The environment includes the natural environment (physical, chemical and biological factors) and the social environment (economic, occupational, cultural, educational and behavioral factors), whose harmful factors can act on the human body in a long-term and integrated manner, interfering with any part of reproductive development and endangering reproductive health. Long-term exposure to chemical and physical pollutants has been shown to affect reproductive function, leading to reduced or lost libido, adverse pregnancy outcomes, infertility, malformations and tumors in offspring, etc. Social and behavioral factors also play an important role in human reproductive health, such as parental smoking or alcohol abuse can lead to fetal birth defects and mental retardation; chronic stress can cause abnormal ovulation or amenorrhea in women and reduced sperm count, reduced sperm motility and morphological changes in men. Chemical pollution – environmental hormones sound the alarm. Studies have found that many chemical pollutants have hormone-like effects and can interfere with the endocrine function of organisms, causing harmful effects on the organism, offspring or (sub)groups, called environmental endocrine disruptors, also known as environmental hormones or environmental hormones. More than 70 kinds of environmental endocrine disruptors have been identified, mainly pesticides, synthetic detergents, preservatives, paints, plastic products and petroleum products. They affect the synthesis, secretion, transmission, binding, initiation and elimination of hormones in the body, thus affecting reproduction, development and behavior of individuals in many ways. A variety of pollutants have been found to exhibit significant disruptive effects on estrogen, testosterone, thyroxine, catecholamines, etc. Many sources show that environmental hormones can cause disruption of testicular development, permanent dysfunction, cryptorchidism, testicular cancer, penile hypoplasia, hypospadias, abnormal development of reproductive organs, cancer of reproductive organs, infertility, sex ratio disorders, fetal and nursing infant disorders, decreased immune function, lower IQ, etc. Electromagnetic radiation pollution – the invisible killer everywhere. With the development of modern technology, electromagnetic radiation pollution has become ubiquitous. In addition to high-voltage lines, substations, radio stations, television stations, radar stations, wireless paging stations, electromagnetic wave towers, medical equipment, office automation equipment, air conditioners, refrigerators, microwave ovens, televisions, computers, cell phones and other electronic products and household appliances in the process of use will produce a variety of different wavelengths and frequencies of electromagnetic radiation, these electromagnetic waves fill the space, invisible, they have a human health They have a non-negligible impact on human health.