Pesticides mimic estrogen in shellfish.Two common water pollutants can function in shellfish as the female sex hormone sex hormone n. Any of various steroid hormones, such as estrogen and androgen, affecting the growth or function of the reproductive organs and the development of secondary sex characteristics. estrogen does. However, new studies show different behavioral effects of those contaminants on two species. Elliptio complanata is a freshwater mussel mussel, edible freshwater or marine bivalve mollusk. Mussels are able to move slowly by means of the muscular foot. They feed and breathe by filtering water through extensible tubes called siphons; a large mussel filters 10 gal (38 liters) of water per day. whose populations are seriously declining in the United States. Katherine Flynn of Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y., and her colleagues exposed lab-kept mussels to the weed killer atrazine atrazine a triazine herbicide; it is not poisonous at levels of intake likely to be encountered in agriculture. atrazine Toxicology A nonphytoestrogenic herbicide. See Phytoestrogen. or to estrogen for a week. Atrazine has exhibited estrogenic effects in other species (SN: 11/2/02,p.275). At an atrazine concentration of 15 parts per billion (ppb), a value permitted in U.S. waters by the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and , the mussels were 30 percent less likely to burrow than were mussels kept in clean water. Atrazine doses far higher and lower didn't impair this defensive behavior, the researchers reported in Montreal at the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry meeting in November. The animals had the same response when the exposed to low concentrations of true estrogen. Flynn's coworker co·work·er or co-work·er n. One who works with another; a fellow worker. , Josephine A. Bonventre of Rutgers University in Piscataway, N.J., observed radically different responses of the clam Corbicula fluminea to estrogen and another estrogenlike pollutant. She exposed this invasive species for 1 day to between 0.1 and 15 ppb of bifenthrin, an insecticide (SN: 2/4/06, p. 74). Clams receiving the highest bifenthrin dose produced 46 percent more of the protein vitellogenin Vitellogenin (Vg) (from latin vitellus = yolk and gener = to produce) is a synonymous term for the gene and the expressed protein. The molecule is classified as a glyco-lipo-protein, having properties of a sugar, fat and protein. than did clams in water without insecticides. Animals normally produce vitellogenin only in response to estrogen. However, no dose of bifenthrin or exposure to true estrogen deterred this species from burrowing. "Maybe that contributes to its success as an invasive species," Flynn says. If these clams are immune to bifenthrin's behavior-disrupting effects, more of the clams can burrow and avoid predators, she notes.--J.R. |
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