| Literature DB >> 27019728 |
Abstract
In amphibians, abnormal metamorph sex ratios and sexual development have almost exclusively been considered in response to synthetic compounds like pesticides or pharmaceuticals. However, endocrine-active plant chemicals (i.e. phytoestrogens) are commonly found in agricultural and urban waterways hosting frog populations with deviant sexual development. Yet the effects of these compounds on amphibian development remain predominantly unexplored. Legumes, like clover, are common in agricultural fields and urban yards and exude phytoestrogen mixtures from their roots. These root exudates serve important ecological functions and may also be a source of phytoestrogens in waterways. I show that clover root exudate produces male-biased sex ratios and accelerates male metamorphosis relative to females in low and intermediate doses of root exudate. My results indicate that root exudates are a potential source of contaminants impacting vertebrate development and that humans may be cultivating sexual abnormalities in wildlife by actively managing certain plant species.Entities:
Keywords: endocrine disruption; phytoandrogen; phytoestrogen; rhizosphere
Year: 2015 PMID: 27019728 PMCID: PMC4807449 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.150433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Figure 1.Conceptual diagram illustrating parallel impacts from plants like (i) agricultural soy or (ii) clover in suburban yards on developing (iii) and adult (iv) amphibians from root exudates. These exudates are hormonally active and hypothetically transit through the soil into aquatic ecosystems, impacting amphibian development. Designed by Monte Kawahara.
Figure 2.Images of experimental red clover (Trifolium pratense) seedling vegetative (a) and root (b) tissues grown hydroponically at three densities from left to right. Tadpoles exposed to root exudate were sexed by gross gonadal morphology as either males (c) or females (d). Red brackets indicate the length of the gonad (testes—T; ovary—O). Also represented are fat bodies (FB) and kidneys (K).
Figure 3.Counts of male and female metamorphs in each root exudate treatment and sex ratio pie charts. Asterisk indicates significant deviation from parity.
Figure 4.Boxplots of metamorphic timing over 13 days for both sexes in each treatment. In each box, bold lines represent the median while black diamonds represent the mean. The boxes are the first and third quartiles while the vertical lines are the highest and lowest value within the interquartile range. Letters above boxes indicate Tukey’s post hoc comparisons; lower case letters for females and upper case letters for males indicate separate analyses for each sex. Asterisks at the bottom of each panel indicate significant pairwise differences between males and females within a given treatment. Males from the low and medium treatments metamorphosed faster than females from the same treatments. This is in part due to accelerated metamorphic rates of males from these two treatments compared with the control males.