Brown A Ross, Owen Stewart F, Peters James, Zhang Yong, Soffker Marta, Paull Gregory C, Hosken David J, Wahab M Abdul, Tyler Charles R
AstraZeneca Global Environment, Macclesfield, Cheshire SK10 4TF, United Kingdom; Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon EX4 4QD, United Kingdom;
AstraZeneca Global Environment, Macclesfield, Cheshire SK10 4TF, United Kingdom;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Mar 17;112(11):E1237-46. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1416269112. Epub 2015 Mar 2.
Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are potent environmental contaminants, and their effects on wildlife populations could be exacerbated by climate change, especially in species with environmental sex determination. Endangered species may be particularly at risk because inbreeding depression and stochastic fluctuations in male and female numbers are often observed in the small populations that typify these taxa. Here, we assessed the interactive effects of water temperature and EDC exposure on sexual development and population viability of inbred and outbred zebrafish (Danio rerio). Water temperatures adopted were 28 °C (current ambient mean spawning temperature) and 33 °C (projected for the year 2100). The EDC selected was clotrimazole (at 2 μg/L and 10 μg/L), a widely used antifungal chemical that inhibits a key steroidogenic enzyme [cytochrome P450(CYP19) aromatase] required for estrogen synthesis in vertebrates. Elevated water temperature and clotrimazole exposure independently induced male-skewed sex ratios, and the effects of clotrimazole were greater at the higher temperature. Male sex ratio skews also occurred for the lower clotrimazole exposure concentration at the higher water temperature in inbred fish but not in outbred fish. Population viability analysis showed that population growth rates declined sharply in response to male skews and declines for inbred populations occurred at lower male skews than for outbred populations. These results indicate that elevated temperature associated with climate change can amplify the effects of EDCs and these effects are likely to be most acute in small, inbred populations exhibiting environmental sex determination and/or differentiation.
内分泌干扰化学物质(EDCs)是强效的环境污染物,气候变化可能会加剧它们对野生动物种群的影响,尤其是在具有环境性别决定机制的物种中。濒危物种可能特别容易受到威胁,因为在这些分类单元典型的小种群中,经常会观察到近亲繁殖衰退以及雄性和雌性数量的随机波动。在此,我们评估了水温与EDC暴露对近交和远交斑马鱼(Danio rerio)性发育和种群生存力的交互作用。采用的水温为28℃(当前环境平均产卵温度)和33℃(预计到2100年)。所选的EDC是克霉唑(浓度为2μg/L和10μg/L),这是一种广泛使用的抗真菌化学物质,可抑制脊椎动物雌激素合成所需的一种关键类固醇生成酶[细胞色素P450(CYP19)芳香化酶]。水温升高和克霉唑暴露分别导致雄性偏多的性别比例,并且在较高温度下克霉唑的影响更大。在较高水温下,近交鱼中较低克霉唑暴露浓度也出现了雄性性别比例偏差,而远交鱼则未出现。种群生存力分析表明,种群增长率因雄性偏差而急剧下降,近交种群在较低的雄性偏差下就出现了下降,而远交种群则不然。这些结果表明,与气候变化相关的水温升高会放大EDC的影响,并且这些影响在表现出环境性别决定和/或分化的小近交种群中可能最为严重。