There is a biological function to them, the ‘real’ answer is that it just didn’t matter if they were a different color. Bodies do all kinds of weird stuff just because ‘it doesn’t matter’ from an evolutionary perspective.
It may have even been an asset in evolution as a darker areola made a ‘boob’ look more ‘booby’.
A lot of plausible answers here, but it’s worth considering that some features just appear stochastically without specifically being selected for or adaptively advantageous. We might have them because the advantages people name provide an adaptive advantage, but so far none of those answers are perfect because it’s not clear that the absence of those features provides a reduction in ability to propagate your genes. Many, and some argue, most, features appear as a result of genetic drift that isn’t actively harmful. The areola could be such a feature.
Related: could be a sex selection advantage. We’re the only mammals with permanently engorged breasts, likely because of sex selection. Areolas could be like that.
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