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From
the BBC Weedkiller
'threatens frogs' Thursday, 31 October, 2002, 02:08 GMT One of
the world's most commonly used herbicides, atrazine, poses a serious threat to
frogs and other amphibians, American scientists claim. The researchers studied male leopard frogs across a large area of
the US and found a high proportion to be developing female characteristics where
they swam in waters contaminated with the herbicide. The survey of the wild animals, published in the journal Nature,
builds on laboratory work which also suggests that male frogs can be feminised
through exposure to the weedkiller. "These studies clearly indicate that atrazine is detrimental to
amphibians," said Dr Tyrone Hayes, associate professor of integrative
biology at the University of California at Berkeley. However, the work has been questioned by the primary producers of
atrazine, the Swiss-based agrochemical giant Syngenta. It says the effects noted by Dr Hayes' team have long been observed
in the wild - even before atrazine was marketed - and there is no established
evidence to link the two. Wild results Amphibians are declining worldwide. Scientists believe many factors
are at play, from climate change to attack by parasites. The work by Dr Hayes and colleagues would suggest that agrochemicals
are also playing a significant part in the decline. Earlier this year, they reported that male African clawed frogs (Xenopus
laevis) raised in laboratory tanks contaminated with atrazine developed egg
cells in their testes - they became hermaphrodites. This feminisation process, they found, would occur in water with
atrazine levels as low as 0.1 parts per billion (ppb), 30 times lower than the
current allowable limit for atrazine in drinking water set by the US
Environmental Protection Agency. Dr Hayes' team has now repeated the work on male leopard frogs (Rana
pipiens - one of the most common frog species in North America). These, too, became demasculinised when raised in lab tanks. But the
Californian researchers have gone a step further by looking for similar effects
in the wild. Comparative studies They sampled leopard frog tadpoles in eight separate ponds, ditches,
rivers and streams in the Midwest during the summer of 2001 and say they found
feminised male frogs at every site with measurable levels of atrazine. The sites were scattered through the Corn (maize) Belt and beyond,
including in Utah, Wyoming, Nebraska and near the Iowa-Illinois border. The site with the highest concentration of feminised frogs was along
the North Platte River in Wyoming. There, 92% of male frogs showed sex reversal.
This area of Wyoming reports little use of atrazine, but the river
is fed by streams that carry run-off from Colorado farms, which do use
significant amounts of the herbicide. Other species Atrazine has been used to control weeds in maize and soy crops for
40 years, but concerns over its possible effects on human health have now led to
it being banned in several European countries (but not the UK). Syngenta disputes much of Dr Hayes' work. It says its experts have
been unable to reproduce his laboratory work and have questioned the quality of
his field work. The company told the BBC: "The occurrence of hermaphrodites in
the genus Rana has been previously observed, with the earliest reports
appearing decades before the introduction of atrazine. "Recent studies in other frog species have found no significant
relationship between the occurrence of hermaphrodites and the historical and
spatial usage patterns of this herbicide." For his part, Dr Hayes has criticised the studies undertaken by
Syngenta to check his work, accusing the company of not conducting its
experiments properly. |