the municipal sewer system were just
as likely to have intersex frogs nearby.
For a next step, Skelly and colleagues
are looking for signs that contraceptives or other estrogen-mimicking
substances from wastewater are affecting frogs in a typical Avon wetland. If the
cause of intersex frogs there turns out to
be estrogen mimics in the wastewater,
then more than one contaminant may
be contributing.
Revelations about intersex frogs in
suburbia do not mean scientists have
less concern now about amphibians
in farmlands.
For example, one of the most widely
used fungicides on crops in the United
States, chlorothalonil, raises mortality
rates among frog tadpoles at low concentrations, Taegan McMahon of the
University of South Florida in Tampa
reported at the meeting. And by “low,”
she means one ten-thousandth of the
exposure expected after a farmer treats
a field near the tadpoles’ wetland.
A computer model predicts that
waterways near a field will pick up 164
micrograms per liter of the fungicide
from runoff, McMahon said. When
tadpoles of southern leopard frogs
and green tree frogs were put in water
tainted with that level of chlorothalonil, all 18 died within 24 hours. (Another
species, the Cuban tree frog, proved
more resilient.)
When she let testing run for a month,
tadpoles exposed to just 0.0164 micrograms per liter also perished in greater
numbers than those in clean water.
Other research has documented risks to
fish and toads, but McMahon said that as
far she knows, she and her colleagues are
the first to test chlorothalonil’s effects
on frog tadpoles.
Mixing predatory cues
What happens when tadpoles encounter another pollutant in runoff, the weed
killer glyphosate, has proved challenging
to analyze in a realistic way.
In a series of lab experiments, Rick
Relyea of the University of Pittsburgh
had added the scent of predators such
as dragonflies to water spiked with
glyphosate, familiar in the many formulations of the herbicide Roundup. Death
rates of tadpoles were higher in the
scented water than in a plain glyphosate
bath. That work has raised the concern
that earlier findings in lab tests without
predators might not have captured the
full impact of runoff.
More recently, however, Relyea and
colleagues have turned those earlier
results topsy-turvy. The
team repeated the same
basic experiment as part
of a series of tests in large
outdoor tubs offering more
realistic circumstances.
Addressing whether
the results were the same,
at the meeting Relyea
flashed an image of an outraged baby on the screen
with the word “NO” for a caption. In
larger tubs, adding a caged predator near
the water surface actually increased survival rates rather than reducing them.
What happens in the deeper, more
realistic tubs, Relyea said, is that predator cues scare the tadpoles into hiding
down deep in the water. And the outdoor
tubs have enough sunlight and water to
stratify, so the majority of the glyphosate concentrates in the warm upper
layer and a substantially lighter dose
stays in the cooler bottom layer. In the
new study, the scared tadpoles spent
most of their time near the bottom with
its less dangerous concentration.
The work doesn’t mean that glyphosate runoff is safe for amphibians; Relyea
has shown that it can kill tadpoles. Yet
the experiment shows how difficult it
can be to design realistic lab tests for
physiological and behavioral responses.
If amphibians have become canaries
in the coal mine, then reptiles have
become ecotoxicology’s elephant in the
living room, a looming topic that doesn’t
get a lot of overt attention. Snakes
swimming through tainted water have
scales to offer some protection, unlike
frogs’ notoriously permeable skin. Yet
water snakes eat mostly fish, and fish
can accumulate pollutants in their bodies, says
Lorin Neuman-Lee of
Eastern Illinois University in Charleston.
Neuman-Lee, along
with Stephen Mullin
and other Eastern Illinois
colleagues, is beginning
to look at the possible
effects of atrazine on
northern water snakes. The researchers did not find evidence of a widely
proposed effect of atrazine: revving up
an enzyme called aromatase. But in a
study of 24 female snakes with developing embryos, “we had some very strange
things happen,” Neuman-Lee said at the
meeting. An unusual proportion of the
offspring were stillborn (water snakes
don’t lay eggs but give birth to fully
formed young).
Also, with all the talk about atrazine’s
possible role in feminizing male amphibians, Neuman-Lee said she would not
have been surprised to see a lot of girls
in the litters of baby snakes. But only
16 percent of the babies from the atra-zine-laden moms turned out to be girls,
when normally the ratio would approach
50-50. The skew might be a sign of some
kind of disruption, but Neuman-Lee
said much more work needs to be done
to understand the effect.
Figuring out all that’s going on with
herps and chemical pollutants is going
to take a lot more study. Maybe there will
someday be iconically vulnerable snakes
in coal mines too. s
If amphibians
are canaries
in the coal mine,
then reptiles
have become
ecotoxicology’s
elephant in the
living room.
02468
Gender-flipping frogs a study of 233 frogs
revealed that the feminizing effects previously
seen mostly near farms were even more common in urban and suburban habitats.
Percent of intersex frogs
Woodlands (none)
Farms
Urban areas
Suburbia
10 12 14 16 18 20 22
Explore more
s d. W. Sparling et al, eds. Ecotoxicology
of Amphibians and Reptiles, 2nd
edition. crc Press, 2010.