Wow. This might explain the anterless, mature bull elk I killed this year.
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ChemTrust
Press Release
Widespread feminisation of male wildlife raises the alarm.
A report released today by CHEM Trust shows that male fish, amphibians, reptiles,
birds and mammals have been harmed by chemicals in the environment. Widespread
feminisation of male vertebrate wildlife is highlighted. These findings add to mounting worries about the role of hormone-disrupting or so-called ‘gender-bending' chemicals in the environment, and the implications for human health.
In mammals, genital disruption in males has been widely reported, including: intersex
features (such as egg tissue in the testes of the male); small phallus; small testes;
undescended testes; abnormal testes; or ambiguous genitals.
In the UK, effects on otters and seals are generating concern. A UK study of road kill otters published last year noted that otters with higher levels of organochlorine contaminants had shorter baculums (penis bones),1 and this year more otters than ever previously reported have been found with un-descended testes.2 Furthermore seal populations have not increased again since they were decimated by the outbreak of phocine distemper virus in 2002. The reduced number of seals in the North Sea off eastern England is puzzling scientists, who are now planning to examine their reproductive health.3
Species across the globe have been damaged, including polar bears in the Arctic and
eland antelopes in Africa.4
The males of egg-laying species including fish, amphibians, birds, and reptiles have
also been feminised by exposure to sex hormone disrupting chemicals and have been
found to be abnormally making egg yolk protein, normally made by females. Affected
species are widespread, and include, flounder in UK estuaries, cod in the North Sea,
cane toads in Florida, peregrine falcons in Spain, and turtles from the Great Lakes in North America.
Gwynne Lyons, author of the report and director of CHEM Trust commented,
“Urgent action is needed to control gender bending chemicals, and more resources
are needed for monitoring wildlife. Man-made chemicals are clearly damaging the
basic male tool-kit. If wildlife populations crash, it will be too late. Unless enough males contribute to the next generation, there is a real threat to animal populations in the long term.
It has now been shown, beyond doubt, that several ‘gender benders’ can act
together as a mixture or cocktail to cause effects even when individually each
chemical is below the concentration at which it would cause harm on its own. EU
regulators must ensure legislation takes this real-world ‘mixture effect’ into account or reproduction will be put in jeopardy. Sadly, during negotiations of the
forthcoming EU pesticides Regulation, the UK Government was one of just 3
Member States5 not to back the proposed tough controls to cut-off the use of
hormone disrupting pesticides."
There are various ways that man-made hormone disrupting chemicals can undermine
the sexual health of male wildlife. For example, chemicals which block the male
hormone androgen, the so-called anti-androgenic chemicals, can cause un-descended
testes and can feminise males. Similarly, some sex hormone disrupting chemicals can
mimic oestrogen, the female hormone, and also feminise males.
Many man-made chemicals can block androgen action, and these include several
pesticides and some phthalates, used in consumer products to make plastics flexible.
Worryingly, a study of effluents from UK sewage works has found that around three
quarters of these discharges have considerable anti-androgenic activity,6 and
investigations are underway to identify the chemicals to blame.
For more information contact:
Gwynne Lyons, Tel: 01603 507363 Mobile: 07944 422 898.
Gwynne.lyons@chemtrust.org.uk
or Elizabeth Salter Green, Tel: 020 8360 1259 Mobile: 07976 273 157.
Elizabeth.saltergreen@chemtrust.org.uk
Notes for Editors:
1 Simpson, V.R. (2007) Health status of otters in Southern and South-West
England 1996-2003. Science Report SC010064/SRI, ISBN: 978-1-84432-7157,
Environment Agency, Bristol. (online) http://publications.environmentagency.
gov.uk/pdf/SCHO0307BMKL-e-e.pdf?lang=_e
2 Contact Elizabeth Chadwick, Tel: 02920 874046
Email: chadwickea@Cardiff.ac.uk
3 Britain holds 40% of the total European harbour seal population, and the
numbers of harbour seals in eastern England have not increased since the end
of the 2002 phocine distemper epidemic. Indeed, apart from around the Inner
Hebrides, there is evidence of a general decline in large harbour seal colonies
around Britain.
Contact Ailsa Hall, Deputy Director, Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of
St Andrews. Email: ajh7@st-andrews.ac.uk
Tel (work): 01334 462634 Mobile (Sunday & eves): 07786 358981.
12 December 2008
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1 comment:
Good grief. What next?
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