Cargando…

Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?

Amphibian populations are declining globally at an alarming rate. Pesticides are among a number of proposed causes for these declines. Although a sizable database examining effects of pesticides on amphibians exists, the vast majority of these studies focus on toxicological effects (lethality, exter...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hayes, Tyrone B., Case, Paola, Chui, Sarah, Chung, Duc, Haeffele, Cathryn, Haston, Kelly, Lee, Melissa, Mai, Vien Phoung, Marjuoa, Youssra, Parker, John, Tsui, Mable
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1874187/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16818245
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.8051
_version_ 1782133473125859328
author Hayes, Tyrone B.
Case, Paola
Chui, Sarah
Chung, Duc
Haeffele, Cathryn
Haston, Kelly
Lee, Melissa
Mai, Vien Phoung
Marjuoa, Youssra
Parker, John
Tsui, Mable
author_facet Hayes, Tyrone B.
Case, Paola
Chui, Sarah
Chung, Duc
Haeffele, Cathryn
Haston, Kelly
Lee, Melissa
Mai, Vien Phoung
Marjuoa, Youssra
Parker, John
Tsui, Mable
author_sort Hayes, Tyrone B.
collection PubMed
description Amphibian populations are declining globally at an alarming rate. Pesticides are among a number of proposed causes for these declines. Although a sizable database examining effects of pesticides on amphibians exists, the vast majority of these studies focus on toxicological effects (lethality, external malformations, etc.) at relatively high doses (parts per million). Very few studies focus on effects such as endocrine disruption at low concentrations. Further, most studies examine exposures to single chemicals only. The present study examined nine pesticides (four herbicides, two fungicides, and three insecticides) used on cornfields in the midwestern United States. Effects of each pesticide alone (0.1 ppb) or in combination were examined. In addition, we also examined atrazine and S-metolachlor combined (0.1 or 10 ppb each) and the commercial formulation Bicep II Magnum, which contains both of these herbicides. These two pesticides were examined in combination because they are persistent throughout the year in the wild. We examined larval growth and development, sex differentiation, and immune function in leopard frogs (Rana pipiens). In a follow-up study, we also examined the effects of the nine-compound mixture on plasma corticosterone levels in male African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis). Although some of the pesticides individually inhibited larval growth and development, the pesticide mixtures had much greater effects. Larval growth and development were retarded, but most significantly, pesticide mixtures negated or reversed the typically positive correlation between time to metamorphosis and size at metamorphosis observed in controls: exposed larvae that took longer to metamorphose were smaller than their counterparts that metamorphosed earlier. The nine-pesticide mixture also induced damage to the thymus, resulting in immunosuppression and contraction of flavobacterial meningitis. The study in X. laevis revealed that these adverse effects may be due to an increase in plasma levels of the stress hormone corticosterone. Although it cannot be determined whether all the pesticides in the mixture contribute to these adverse effects or whether some pesticides are effectors, some are enhancers, and some are neutral, the present study revealed that estimating ecological risk and the impact of pesticides on amphibians using studies that examine only single pesticides at high concentrations may lead to gross underestimations of the role of pesticides in amphibian declines.
format Text
id pubmed-1874187
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-18741872007-06-07 Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact? Hayes, Tyrone B. Case, Paola Chui, Sarah Chung, Duc Haeffele, Cathryn Haston, Kelly Lee, Melissa Mai, Vien Phoung Marjuoa, Youssra Parker, John Tsui, Mable Environ Health Perspect Monograph Amphibian populations are declining globally at an alarming rate. Pesticides are among a number of proposed causes for these declines. Although a sizable database examining effects of pesticides on amphibians exists, the vast majority of these studies focus on toxicological effects (lethality, external malformations, etc.) at relatively high doses (parts per million). Very few studies focus on effects such as endocrine disruption at low concentrations. Further, most studies examine exposures to single chemicals only. The present study examined nine pesticides (four herbicides, two fungicides, and three insecticides) used on cornfields in the midwestern United States. Effects of each pesticide alone (0.1 ppb) or in combination were examined. In addition, we also examined atrazine and S-metolachlor combined (0.1 or 10 ppb each) and the commercial formulation Bicep II Magnum, which contains both of these herbicides. These two pesticides were examined in combination because they are persistent throughout the year in the wild. We examined larval growth and development, sex differentiation, and immune function in leopard frogs (Rana pipiens). In a follow-up study, we also examined the effects of the nine-compound mixture on plasma corticosterone levels in male African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis). Although some of the pesticides individually inhibited larval growth and development, the pesticide mixtures had much greater effects. Larval growth and development were retarded, but most significantly, pesticide mixtures negated or reversed the typically positive correlation between time to metamorphosis and size at metamorphosis observed in controls: exposed larvae that took longer to metamorphose were smaller than their counterparts that metamorphosed earlier. The nine-pesticide mixture also induced damage to the thymus, resulting in immunosuppression and contraction of flavobacterial meningitis. The study in X. laevis revealed that these adverse effects may be due to an increase in plasma levels of the stress hormone corticosterone. Although it cannot be determined whether all the pesticides in the mixture contribute to these adverse effects or whether some pesticides are effectors, some are enhancers, and some are neutral, the present study revealed that estimating ecological risk and the impact of pesticides on amphibians using studies that examine only single pesticides at high concentrations may lead to gross underestimations of the role of pesticides in amphibian declines. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2006-04 2006-01-24 /pmc/articles/PMC1874187/ /pubmed/16818245 http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.8051 Text en This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original DOI
spellingShingle Monograph
Hayes, Tyrone B.
Case, Paola
Chui, Sarah
Chung, Duc
Haeffele, Cathryn
Haston, Kelly
Lee, Melissa
Mai, Vien Phoung
Marjuoa, Youssra
Parker, John
Tsui, Mable
Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?
title Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?
title_full Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?
title_fullStr Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?
title_full_unstemmed Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?
title_short Pesticide Mixtures, Endocrine Disruption, and Amphibian Declines: Are We Underestimating the Impact?
title_sort pesticide mixtures, endocrine disruption, and amphibian declines: are we underestimating the impact?
topic Monograph
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1874187/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16818245
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.8051
work_keys_str_mv AT hayestyroneb pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT casepaola pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT chuisarah pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT chungduc pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT haeffelecathryn pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT hastonkelly pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT leemelissa pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT maivienphoung pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT marjuoayoussra pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT parkerjohn pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact
AT tsuimable pesticidemixturesendocrinedisruptionandamphibiandeclinesareweunderestimatingtheimpact