----- forwarded message -----
Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 14:04:04 -0700
From: radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Weedkiller makes male frogs into females

Weedkiller makes male frogs into females - study

Story by Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent Story Date: 17/4/2002

WASHINGTON - The most popular weedkiller in the United States can give male
frogs female sex organs and other attributes, researchers said this week,
in a study that could shed light on the global decline in amphibian
populations. Very low levels of the herbicide atrazine can cause male frogs
to grow female sex organs and curtail their croaks - key to attracting
mates in the frog world - a team at the University of California Berkeley
found. The frogs appear normal on the outside, but often have both male and
female sex organs, the researchers said, adding that the findings may help
explain the amphibian population decline. The decline worries scientists
because amphibians such as frogs respond to environmental dangers before
other species. "Atrazine is the most commonly used herbicide in the U.S.
and probably the world," the researchers wrote in their report, published
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "It can be present
at several parts per million in agricultural runoff and can reach 40 parts
per billion in precipitation." Such a common pollutant would reach many
animals as well as humans, so the team, led by Tyrone Hayes, tested its
effects on the African clawed frog Xenopus laevis. They put tadpoles into
water laced with levels of atrazine much lower than allowed by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, and found that the weedkiller had serious
effects on 16 percent of them. These genetically male frogs had testicles
and ovaries, and many had testicles that did not function properly and
contained eggs and sperm. Their levels of testosterone were much lower than
normal. The male frogs also had much smaller larynxes than normal, which
could affect their ability to croak and attract mates, Hayes' team
reported. The researchers determined that atrazine is an endocrine
disruptor - a class of chemicals that disrupts the hormones in the body.
Many pesticides fall into this category and it is one of the qualities that
can make them dangerous. "We hypothesize that atrazine ... promotes the
conversion of testosterone to estrogen," they wrote. "This widespread
compound and other environmental endocrine disruptors may be a factor in
global amphibian declines." Environmentalists responded with alarm. "This
research is further proof that this pesticide is a major threat to public
health and the environment," the Natural Resources Defense Council said in
a statement. "EPA's tap water standard for atrazine is 3 parts per billion
- 30 times higher than the level at which these dramatic sexual side
effects occurred. At higher levels, the frogs developed additional health
problems," it added. "This rigorous scientific study reinforces what we and
other scientists have been saying for years - atrazine is a dangerous
pesticide," the council's Jennifer Sass said. "It's no surprise that it's
been banned by many European countries." She said the study had
implications for humans, especially children who have not reached puberty.


Reply via email to