Chemicals remaining after wastewater treatment change the gender of fish
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Monday, July 19, 2010 Contacts: Arlyn G. Riskind Director, Media Relations Phone: (301) 941-0240 Email: ariskind@endo-society.org Aaron Lohr Manager, Media Relations Phone: (240) 482-1380 Email: alohr@endo-society.org
Male fish that used to be feminized after chemicals,
such as the pharmaceutical ethinylestradiol, made it through the Boulder,
Colo., Wastewater Treatment Plant and into Boulder Creek, are taking longer to
become feminized after a plant upgrade to an activated sludge process,
according to a new study. The results will be presented Sunday at The Endocrine
Society’s 92nd Annual Meeting in San Diego. Although the levels of the chemicals that the fish
swam in were very low even before the upgrade, the chemicals are endocrine
disrupters. They mimic estrogen and may disrupt the endocrine (hormone) system
of both animals and humans, said the study’s principal investigator, David
Norris, PhD, an integrative physiology professor at the University of Colorado
at Boulder. Norris’ team reported in 2006 that native male fish in
Boulder Creek decreased in numbers with respect to females and numerous
intersex fish were found downstream of the wastewater treatment plant. After a
technology upgrade to the wastewater treatment plant in 2008, the reproductive
disruption in the fish was far less pronounced. However, Norris said the study
results should still concern people. “The fish are a
wake-up call,” Norris said. “Our bodies and those of the much more sensitive
human fetus are being exposed everyday to a variety of chemicals that are
capable of altering not only our development and physiology but that of future
generations as well.” With other scientists, Norris studied samples of the
wastewater effluent, the plant-treated water that enters the stream and becomes
another city’s drinking water. Grants from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the city of Boulder supported this research. They found other endocrine disrupters, including
synthetic and natural reproductive steroids. They believe the chemicals come
from natural female hormones and birth control pills excreted via urine and
from detergents, cosmetics and other consumer products flushed down toilets and
drains. The amount of estrogens in the sampled effluent was enough to explain
the effects on the fish “downstream” from the treatment plant—in the river
below the plant, according to Norris. The researchers saw no signs of
reproductive disruption in fish upstream. Also, the investigators exposed adult male fathead
minnows to wastewater effluent they diluted with water taken from upstream of
the plant. After seven days’ exposure to this water, the fish had suppressed
male sex characteristics and greatly elevated levels of the protein
vitellogenin. Female fish make vitellogenin under the influence of estrogens,
and male fish produce very little of it, so elevated levels in males indicate
estrogen exposure, Norris explained. After the technology upgrade to the wastewater
treatment plant in 2008, the effluent was considerably less estrogenic to the
fish. After the treatment plant’s upgrade, the minnows exhibited less intense
loss of male sex characteristics, an initial analysis found. “It took 28 days
to get a significant elevation in vitellogenin and then only in 100 percent
effluent,” Norris said. “However, these improvements seen in wildlife will not
substantially lessen the risk to human health because drinking water is not the
major source of estrogenic chemicals for people.”
# # # Founded in 1916, The Endocrine Society is the world's oldest, largest, and most active organization devoted to research on hormones and the clinical practice of endocrinology. Today, The Endocrine Society's membership consists of over 14,000 scientists, physicians, educators, nurses and students in more than 80 countries. Together, these members represent all basic, applied, and clinical interests in endocrinology. The Endocrine Society is based in Chevy Chase, Md. To learn more about the Society, and the field of endocrinology, visit our web site at www.endo-society.org. |
