Title of article :
An easy, non-destructive, probabilistic method to evaluate the imposex response of gastropod populations
Author/Authors :
Marcos Antonio Fernandez، نويسنده , , Fernanda Mattos Pinheiro، نويسنده , , Juliana Pereira de Quadros، نويسنده , , Edmundo Camillo Jr.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Endocrine disruption in marine populations is a growing concern. One of the best documented examples is imposex, the development of male characteristics in female gastropods, including the development of a penis and/or vas deferens, by exposure to organotins, mainly tributyltin. This syndrome has been an effective and widely used biomarker of organic tin contamination for almost 20 years. However, established imposex evaluation protocols sacrifice all the animals and repeated assessments can result in depletion of populations. To preserve animal lives as much as possible and to have a fast screening of areas subjected to organotin impacts, a non-destructive approach was tested. This approach uses reversible narcotization and a statistical criterion to evaluate the extent of imposex in the populations, instead of imposex indexes, which are based on evaluation of sacrificed, fixed animals. The data consist of two categories: males plus masculinized females in one category and normal females in another. The probability is then calculated that this sample could have been drawn from a normal population. This new method was tested in two contrasting areas of Brazil and with two different species, and the results compared to the conventional evaluation. Narcotization was completely reversed with a survival rate of 98%. Impacted sites could be identified with this technique in the same way as with the conventional one. The only limitation was that female sterility could not be verified. This disadvantage could well be compensated by the minimal mortality in the studied populations.
Keywords :
biomonitoring , Imposex , Non-destructive approach
Journal title :
Marine Environmental Research
Journal title :
Marine Environmental Research