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Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review

Many studies have assessed the impact of different pollutants on amphibians across a variety of experimental venues (laboratory, mesocosm, and enclosure conditions). Past reviews, using vote-counting methods, have described pollution as one of the major threats faced by amphibians. However, vote-cou...

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Autores principales: Egea-Serrano, Andrés, Relyea, Rick A, Tejedo, Miguel, Torralva, Mar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3434931/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22957147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.249
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author Egea-Serrano, Andrés
Relyea, Rick A
Tejedo, Miguel
Torralva, Mar
author_facet Egea-Serrano, Andrés
Relyea, Rick A
Tejedo, Miguel
Torralva, Mar
author_sort Egea-Serrano, Andrés
collection PubMed
description Many studies have assessed the impact of different pollutants on amphibians across a variety of experimental venues (laboratory, mesocosm, and enclosure conditions). Past reviews, using vote-counting methods, have described pollution as one of the major threats faced by amphibians. However, vote-counting methods lack strong statistical power, do not permit one to determine the magnitudes of effects, and do not compare responses among predefined groups. To address these challenges, we conducted a meta-analysis of experimental studies that measured the effects of different chemical pollutants (nitrogenous and phosphorous compounds, pesticides, road deicers, heavy metals, and other wastewater contaminants) at environmentally relevant concentrations on amphibian survival, mass, time to hatching, time to metamorphosis, and frequency of abnormalities. The overall effect size of pollutant exposure was a medium decrease in amphibian survival and mass and a large increase in abnormality frequency. This translates to a 14.3% decrease in survival, a 7.5% decrease in mass, and a 535% increase in abnormality frequency across all studies. In contrast, we found no overall effect of pollutants on time to hatching and time to metamorphosis. We also found that effect sizes differed among experimental venues and among types of pollutants, but we only detected weak differences among amphibian families. These results suggest that variation in sensitivity to contaminants is generally independent of phylogeny. Some publication bias (i.e., selective reporting) was detected, but only for mass and the interaction effect size among stressors. We conclude that the overall impact of pollution on amphibians is moderately to largely negative. This implies that pollutants at environmentally relevant concentrations pose an important threat to amphibians and may play a role in their present global decline.
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spelling pubmed-34349312012-09-06 Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review Egea-Serrano, Andrés Relyea, Rick A Tejedo, Miguel Torralva, Mar Ecol Evol Original Research Many studies have assessed the impact of different pollutants on amphibians across a variety of experimental venues (laboratory, mesocosm, and enclosure conditions). Past reviews, using vote-counting methods, have described pollution as one of the major threats faced by amphibians. However, vote-counting methods lack strong statistical power, do not permit one to determine the magnitudes of effects, and do not compare responses among predefined groups. To address these challenges, we conducted a meta-analysis of experimental studies that measured the effects of different chemical pollutants (nitrogenous and phosphorous compounds, pesticides, road deicers, heavy metals, and other wastewater contaminants) at environmentally relevant concentrations on amphibian survival, mass, time to hatching, time to metamorphosis, and frequency of abnormalities. The overall effect size of pollutant exposure was a medium decrease in amphibian survival and mass and a large increase in abnormality frequency. This translates to a 14.3% decrease in survival, a 7.5% decrease in mass, and a 535% increase in abnormality frequency across all studies. In contrast, we found no overall effect of pollutants on time to hatching and time to metamorphosis. We also found that effect sizes differed among experimental venues and among types of pollutants, but we only detected weak differences among amphibian families. These results suggest that variation in sensitivity to contaminants is generally independent of phylogeny. Some publication bias (i.e., selective reporting) was detected, but only for mass and the interaction effect size among stressors. We conclude that the overall impact of pollution on amphibians is moderately to largely negative. This implies that pollutants at environmentally relevant concentrations pose an important threat to amphibians and may play a role in their present global decline. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2012-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3434931/ /pubmed/22957147 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.249 Text en © 2012 The Authors. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.
spellingShingle Original Research
Egea-Serrano, Andrés
Relyea, Rick A
Tejedo, Miguel
Torralva, Mar
Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
title Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
title_full Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
title_fullStr Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
title_full_unstemmed Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
title_short Understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
title_sort understanding of the impact of chemicals on amphibians: a meta-analytic review
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3434931/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22957147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.249
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