Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota, 1980 Folwell Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA.
Aquat Toxicol. 2011 Feb;101(3-4):521-8. doi: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2010.12.007. Epub 2010 Dec 17.
Laboratory studies of adult male fathead minnows have shown that when they are exposed to estrogens, they lose their ability to compete for access to females and sire young, suggesting that estrogenic effluents may reduce the genetic fitness of populations of wild fishes. However, it is unknown whether wild fish which are exposed to effluent actually compete with unexposed fishes, how long effects of estrogen exposure last, and whether females are affected by estrogens. This study addressed these issues using the fathead minnow (FHM) and effluent from the Metropolitan Wastewater Treatment Plant (MWTP) a well-studied source of environmental estrogens (EEs) in the Mississippi River. Maze tests found that adult FHMs are neither attracted nor repelled by MWTP effluent while previous studies have shown that minnows are attracted to the warmer waters which characterize effluents; it is realistic that previously unexposed fish enter MWTP effluent in the spring and then compete with exposed individuals. Competitive spawning experiments showed that male FHMs exposed to 44ng E2/l (a high but realistic level) for three weeks failed to compete with unexposed males while males exposed to 4ng E2/l outcompeted and sired more young than unexposed males (p<0.05). The effects of estrogen exposure disappeared within a week of moving fish into uncontaminated water. Female FHM reproductive output and behavior were unaffected by exposure to estrogen. Taken together, these experiments suggest that the behavior of wild fishes likely determines their exposure to EEs and that while the effects of this exposure are likely significant to populations of wild fish, they will be location specific because of factors which determine the duration and intensity of male exposure. We conclude that the role of fish behavior in endocrine disruption strongly warrants additional consideration.
实验室研究表明,成年雄性翻车鱼在接触雌激素后,会丧失与雌性竞争并繁衍后代的能力,这表明雌激素类废水可能会降低野生鱼类种群的遗传适应性。然而,目前尚不清楚接触废水的野生鱼类是否真的会与未接触的鱼类竞争,雌激素暴露的影响会持续多久,以及雌激素是否会影响雌性鱼类。本研究使用翻车鱼(FHM)和城市污水处理厂(MWTP)的废水来解决这些问题,MWTP 是密西西比河中一种研究充分的环境雌激素(EEs)来源。迷宫测试发现,成年 FHM 既不会被 MWTP 废水吸引,也不会被排斥,而之前的研究表明,小鱼会被废水的温暖特性所吸引;以前未接触过废水的鱼类在春天进入 MWTP 废水并与暴露于废水中的个体竞争是很现实的。竞争产卵实验表明,暴露于 44ng E2/l(一个较高但现实的水平)的三周的雄性 FHM 无法与未暴露的雄性竞争,而暴露于 4ng E2/l 的雄性比未暴露的雄性竞争更激烈,繁殖的后代也更多(p<0.05)。将鱼类转移到未受污染的水中一周后,雌激素暴露的影响就消失了。雌性 FHM 的繁殖产量和行为不受雌激素暴露的影响。综上所述,这些实验表明,野生鱼类的行为可能决定了它们对 EEs 的暴露程度,而这种暴露的影响对野生鱼类种群可能是显著的,但由于决定雄性暴露的持续时间和强度的因素,这种影响在不同地点会有所不同。我们得出结论,鱼类行为在内分泌干扰中的作用值得进一步考虑。