동물그림창고(Animal Pictures Archive)
동물사진 포토앨범
새로운 사진 신문속의 동물소식 신기한 동물이야기 동물의 소리 동물동화상 사진 올리기 사진 저작권 English
재미있는 동물사진 괴수/괴어/엽기 동물사진 동물이름사전 동물목록 바깥고리 창고입구 똑똑누리집
Delete Modify    
Salamanders Suffer Delayed Effects Of Common Herbicide [ScienceDaily 2007-03-26] latin dict size=12   common dict size=582
이미지 정보 Original File Name: 20070323 Stream salamanders in the family Plethodontidae (lungless salamanders).jpg Resolution: 300x197 File Size: 14048 Bytes Upload Time: 2007:03:26 19:37:50
올린이 이름 (메일주소): News (from@ScienceDaily.com)
사진 제목 Salamanders Suffer Delayed Effects Of Common Herbicide [ScienceDaily 2007-03-26]
Salamanders Suffer Delayed Effects Of Common Herbicide [ScienceDaily 2007-03-26]; Image ONLY
Email : 카드 | 올린이 | 운영자    사진삭제   정보수정   Admin
Twitter Facebook Google-Buzz Digg StumbleUpon Linkedin eMail
설명
Salamanders Suffer Delayed Effects Of Common Herbicide [ScienceDaily 2007-03-26]

[Photo] Pollution from a common herbicide might be causing die-offs in stream salamanders, according to biologists who say findings from their long-term study raise concerns over the role of atrazine in global amphibian declines. (Credit: Karen Warkentin)

Science Daily ??? Pollution from a common herbicide might be causing die-offs in stream salamanders, according to biologists who say findings from their long-term study raise concerns over the role of atrazine in global amphibian declines.

The results also suggest that while impacts of the herbicide, atrazine, may not show up in short-term studies, even extremely low concentrations of the chemical may be deadly to amphibians in the long run.

"We are concerned that most studies used to make pesticide registration decisions and to derive safe concentrations last for about four days," said Jason R. Rohr, research associate at the Penn State Institutes of Energy and the Environment. "They often do not consider recovery processes, persistent effects of chemical exposure, or interactions among individuals within and between species that can affect our estimates of safe chemical concentrations."

Atrazine is one of the most widely used pesticides in the United States, and possibly the world. It is relatively long-lived and is even found at the poles. According to the U.S Environmental Protection Agency, it is one of the most common contaminants in ground and surface water.

Rohr and his colleagues Timothy M. Sesterhenn, doctoral candidate, Brent D. Palmer, associate professor, and Tyler Sager, doctoral candidate, all at the University of Kentucky, Lexington, exposed streamside salamander larvae to either 4, 40, or 400 parts per billion of atrazine until metamorphosis, the stage where the water-dwelling salamanders lose their gills and develop lungs that enable them to breathe in air. Scientists then tracked their survival to near reproductive age.

Results from the study, which lasted about 500 days, indicated that the two highest concentrations increased salamander mortality during exposure. However, this mortality benefited the survivors who experienced lower competition-related mortality after metamorphosis.

Nevertheless, this recovery from atrazine exposure paled in comparison to the persistent effects of atrazine that continued to cause mortality after exposure ceased, said researchers. Compared to salamanders not exposed to atrazine, survivors of the atrazine exposure had significantly lower survival 421 days after being exposed. In other words, effects of early exposure to the chemical were showing up over the long term, such that the net effect of atrazine exposure was even worse later in life than it was while the animals were being exposed.

"The biggest surprise was that it took nearly a year to detect the effects of atrazine at 4 parts per billion, which is just 1 part per billion above the maximum allowable level in drinking water set by the U.S Environmental Protection Agency," said Rohr, who presented his findings at a recent workshop organized by the U.S Geological Survey in St. Louis, Missouri.

"What this tells me is that we need to consider the long-term effects of chemicals, and that exposure to atrazine during formative stages might have permanent effects on these salamanders that increases their risk of mortality," he added.

While the mechanism by which atrazine causes elevated mortality remains unclear, Rohr says other scientists have evidence suggesting that this pesticide is an endocrine disruptor.

Such chemicals disrupt the production of hormones that are vital to normal bodily functions. Concentrations of atrazine as low as 0.1 parts per billion have been shown to cause male frogs to develop both male and female organs by altering their production of sex hormones.

Findings from Rohr's study, which was funded by the U.S Environmental Protection Agency, National Science Foundation, and the Kentucky Academy of Sciences, could have implications for global amphibian declines.

"Salamanders, and amphibians in general, are crucial to ecosystems, as both predators and prey. They can be seen as bioindicators of environmental stress and harbingers of risk to other animals as well as humans," explained Rohr, also affiliated with Penn State's Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Penn State.

출처: ScienceDaily - http://www.ScienceDaily.com

댓글
손님 Delete
해석해주세요 =-=.
손님 Delete
Hello! Good Site! Thanks you! dxmzmynrxsmgk
저작권 정보 사진의 저작권은 원저작자에게 있습니다. 동물그림창고는 동물관련 사진을 전시할 수 있는 공간만을 제공합니다.사진을 사용하고자 할 경우에는 저작권자와 협의하시기 바랍니다.

Search Major Animal Websites
동정이 잘못되었거나 남기고 싶은 말이 있으면 여기에 남겨주세요.
이름 :    암호 :
메일주소 :
 
사진 검색
뒤로가기 목록 사진등록 창고 홈 English
CopyLeft © since 1995, 동물그림창고. All rights may be reserved.
Powered by KRISTAL IRMS 정보검색관리시스템   iPhotoScrap photo scrap album

Stats