A common growth-promoting hormone used worldwide in the cattle
industry has been found to affect the sexual behaviours of fish at a
very low concentration in waterways – with potentially serious
ecological and evolutionary consequences.
Researchers from Monash
University, in collaboration with researchers from Åbo Akademi
University in Finland, have found that the steroid 17β-trenbolone –
used on livestock to increase muscle growth – alters male reproductive
behaviour in guppy fish (Poecilia reticulata).
This
androgenic growth promoter is part of a group of contaminants
called endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) that enter the environment
through a variety of sources – from discharge of household waste to
agricultural run-off and industrial effluent.
Lead researcher Michael Bertram, a PhD student in the School of Biological Sciences
at Monash University, said over the past few decades concern has been
mounting over EDCs, and that their contamination of aquatic habitats is a
serious environmental problem.
“Endocrine disrupting chemicals
(EDCs) are cause for concern given their capacity to disturb the natural
functioning of the endocrine (hormonal) system, often at very low
concentrations, with potentially catastrophic effects.
Research
until now has focussed primarily on the morphological and physiological
effects of EDC exposure. For the first time, our research has shown that
exposure to an environmentally realistic concentration of
17β-trenbolone – just 22 nanograms per litre - is sufficient to alter
male reproductive behaviour.”
The research shows that exposure of
guppy fish to 17β-trenbolone influences the ratio of male courtship
(where the female chooses her mate) to forced copulatory behaviour
(sneaking), whereby the female is inseminated internally from behind and
does not choose her mate. The results of his research indicated a
marked increase in sneaking behaviour.
“By influencing mating
success, sexual selection can profoundly affect individual populations
and species, with potentially devastating long term evolutionary and
ecological impacts,” Bertram said.
With its widespread global
distribution precipitated by numerous deliberate and accidental
introductions, the small, live-bearing freshwater guppy fish, native to
South ,
was ideal for investigating the effects of 17β-trenbolone, especially
as they are known to inhabit waterways receiving agricultural waste.
Bertram
said that by illustrating the capacity of the agricultural contaminant
to alter reproductive behaviour, the research demonstrated the
possibility of widespread disruption of mating systems in wild
populations.
The next step for the researchers will be to look at sperm viability in male guppy fish exposed to 17β-trenbolone.
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