An Environmental Estrogen Alters Reproductive Hierarchies, Disrupting Sexual Selection in Group-Spawning Fish

There is global concern regarding the potential impacts of endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) on the health of wildlife and humans. Exposure to some estrogens, at concentrations found in the environment, impairs reproductive function and behavior. However, nearly all work on endocrine disruption...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEnvironmental science & technology Vol. 42; no. 13; pp. 5020 - 5025
Main Authors Coe, Tobias S, Hamilton, Patrick B, Hodgson, David, Paull, Gregory C, Stevens, Jamie R, Sumner, Katie, Tyler, Charles R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, DC American Chemical Society 01.07.2008
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Summary:There is global concern regarding the potential impacts of endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) on the health of wildlife and humans. Exposure to some estrogens, at concentrations found in the environment, impairs reproductive function and behavior. However, nearly all work on endocrine disruption has investigated the effects of exposure on individuals and there is an urgent need to understand impacts on populations. Many fish have mating systems with complex social structures and it is not known whether EDCs will exaggerate or buffer the reproductive skews caused by the dominance hierarchies that normally occur for these species. This study investigated the impact of exposure to the pharmaceutical estrogen ethinylestradiol (EE2) on reproductive hierarchies and sexual selection in group-spawning fish. Breeding zebrafish were exposed to environmentally relevant concentrations of EE2, and effects were determined on reproductive output, plasma androgen concentrations (in males), and reproductive success through microsatellite analyses of the offspring. Reproductive hierarchies in breeding colonies of zebrafish were disrupted by exposure to EE2 at a concentration that did not affect the number of eggs produced. The effect was a reduction in the skew in male paternity and increased skew in female maternity. This disruption in the reproductive hierarchy in group spawning fish, if it occurs in the wild, has potentially major implications for population genetic diversity. Reproductive success in male zebrafish was associated with elevated plasma concentrations of the male sex hormone 11-ketotestosterone and this hormone was suppressed in EE2-exposed males.
Bibliography:Experimental design graphic and full PCR protocols used. This information is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
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ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/es800277q