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Pesticide Blamed for Frog Mutations
Mon Apr 15, 5:17 PM ET
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Male frogs exposed to even very low doses of a common weed killer can develop multiple sex organs — sometimes both male and female — researchers in California have discovered.
"I was very much surprised," at the impact of atrazine on developing frogs, said Tyrone B. Hayes of the University of California at Berkeley.
Atrazine is the most commonly used weed killer in North America, he said, and can be found in rainwater, snow runoff and ground water.
"There is virtually no atrazine-free environment," Hayes said.
The Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites) permits up to 3 parts per billion of atrazine in drinking water.
But Hayes' team found it affected frogs at doses as small as 0.1 part per billion. As the amount of atrazine increased, as many as 20 percent of frogs exposed during their early development produced multiple sex organs or had both male and female organs. Many had small, feminized larnynxes.
Hayes' research team concluded that the effect on the frogs results from atrazine causing cells to produce the enzyme aromatase, which is present in vertebrates and converts the male hormone testosterone to the female hormone estrogen.
The effects on frogs in Hayes' study occurred at exposure levels more than 600 times lower than the dose that has been seen to induce aromatase production in human cells.
Their research is reported in Tuesday's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
Asked if atrazine might also be a threat to people at low levels, Hayes said he did not know, adding that, unlike frogs, "we're not in the water all the time."
"I'm not saying it's safe for humans. I'm not saying its unsafe for humans. All I'm saying is it that it makes hermaphrodites of frogs," he said.
Stanley I. Dodson of the University of Wisconsin at Madison called the work "the most important paper in environmental toxicology in decades.
"It shows the effect of the most commonly used herbicide on amphibians in environmentally relevant concentrations," he said.
Asked if people should be worried, he also said: "We don't know."
"It's like a canary in the mine shaft sort of thing," Dodson said, referring to the former practice of miners of bringing canaries with them as warnings of dangerous gases. The birds are very sensitive to gases and would die before the concentration of the gas was enough to harm the miners.
Dodson said that in his research he had found that low exposures atrazine changes the ratio of males to females among water fleas.
In addition to its effects on developing frogs, the Berkeley researchers found that male frogs exposed to atrazine after reaching maturity had a decrease in testosterone to levels equivalent to that found in females.
More from > Top Stories - AP U.S.
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In Reply to: Frogs and pesticide- Yikes posted by Sounder on April 17, 2002 at 03:55:23:
I saw this on CNN and I was shocked and excited that such clear (to me) evidence has been presented here. I sent it to my friends, who didn't really say much about it... I'm not sure if anyone sees the correlation there between toxic chemicals and estrogen production, but researchers within the last 10 or 20 years have been citing excess estrogen, especially from environmental contributors, as causes for early puberty, some types of female reproductive cancers, menstrual problems, infertility etc. I can't imagine stronger evidence for organic foods!
In Reply to: Re: Frogs and pesticide- Yikes posted by thessa on April 17, 2002 at 12:52:23:
But, thessa, you can now buy "organic" foods at a premium - just like the different kinds of gasoline for cars! So, why should anything be done??? (just being sarcastic! :o) )
Raisa
In Reply to: Re: Frogs and pesticide- Yikes posted by Raisa on April 17, 2002 at 16:55:59:
nmi
In Reply to: Frogs and pesticide- Yikes posted by Sounder on April 17, 2002 at 03:55:23:
Thanks, sounder.
Just think, there are at least hundreds of thousands of other chemicals in the environment now that have not even been tested like this. Each one magnifies the damaging effects of the others.
Humans have fouled their nest permanently for economic short gain. The price will be paid in time--if we survive as a species. Remember: We are at the top of the food chain and so this stuff is concentrated in US.
The only reason we have survived this long is that we are the most complex organism on the earth and so have many back up systems. There IS a limit, though, and systems like ours tend to show few cracks before total collapse.
Namaste` to us all!
Walt
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