Are pollutants shrinking polar bear gonads?The more polluted a polar bear's fat, the more likely its reproductive organs will be undersize, scientists find. They collected gonads from 55 male and 44 female bears killed legally by subsistence hunters in east Greenland. The scientists then tested the bears' fat for pollutants that might affect sex hormones. Especially in immature males, testis testis (tĕs`tĭs) or testicle (tĕs`tĭkəl), one of a pair of glands that produce the male reproductive cells, or sperm. length diminished with increasing concentrations of many of these compounds, including DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. , polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants, and banned termiticides called chlordanes. The weight and length of the baculum The baculum (also penis bone, penile bone or os penis) is a bone found in the penis of most mammals. It is absent in humans, equids, marsupials, lagomorphs, and hyenas, amongst others. It is used for copulation and varies in size and shape by species. , a bone that supports a bear's penis, also decreased significantly with increasing concentrations of some of the compounds. Ovary length diminished with increasing PCB PCB: see polychlorinated biphenyl. PCB in full polychlorinated biphenyl Any of a class of highly stable organic compounds prepared by the reaction of chlorine with biphenyl, a two-ring compound. and chlordane chlordane (klōr`dān): see insecticide. concentrations, and ovary weight decreased with increasing PBDEs, the team reports an upcoming issue of Environmental Science & Technology. Although studies had suggested that some of these agents might affect animals' reproduction, "this is the first time it has ever been shown outside the laboratory," says Christian Sonne of Denmark's National Environmental Research Institute in Roskilde, who led the new study. "There's no doubt" that some of the sex-organ changes observed would impair reproduction, he says. The same pollutants might be related to the falling fertility of men in many countries (SN: 1/22/94, p. 56), he adds.--J.R. |
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