4.7 Article

Agriculture Alters Gonadal Form and Function in the Toad Bufo marinus

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
Volume 116, Issue 11, Pages 1526-1532

Publisher

US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.11536

Keywords

amphibians; endocrine disruption; intersex; pesticides; secondary sexual traits

Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [R21 ES014053]
  2. Rewald, Olowo, Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, and Sigma Xi grants in aid of research
  3. University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Women's Club

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BACKGROUND: Many agricultural contaminants disrupt endocrine systems of wildlife. However, evidence of endocrine disruption in wild amphibians living in agricultural areas has been controversial. Typically, studies on the effects of pollutants on wildlife attempt to compare polluted with, P unpolluted sites. OBJECTIVES: We took a novel approach to address this question by explicitly quantifying the relationship between gonadal abnormalities and habitats characterized by differing degrees of agricultural activity. METHODS: We quantified the occurrence of gonadal abnormalities and measures of gonadal function in at least 20 giant toads (Bufo marinus) from each of five sites that occur along a gradient of increasing agricultural land use from 0 to 97%. RESULTS: The number of abnormalities and frequency of intersex gonads increased with agriculture in a dose-dependent fashion. These gonadal abnormalities were associated with altered gonadal function. Testosterone, but not 17 beta-estradiol, concentrations were altered and secondary, sexual traits were either feminized (increased skin mottling) or demasculinized (reduced forearm width and nuptial pad number) in intersex toads. Based on the end points we examined, female morphology and physiology did not differ across sites. However, males front agricultural areas had hormone concentrations and secondary sexual traits that were intermediate between intersex toads and non-agricultural male toads. Skin coloration at the most agricultural site was not sexually, dimorphic; males had female coloration. CONCLUSIONS: Steroid hormone concentrations and secondary sexual traits correlate with reproductive activity and success, so affected toads likely have reduced reproductive success. These reproductive abnormalities could certainly contribute to amphibian population declines occurring in areas exposed to agricultural contaminants.

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