Behavioural analysis has been attracting significant attention as a broad indicator of sub-lethal toxicity and has secured a place as an important subdiscipline in ecotoxicology. Among the most notable characteristics of behavioural research, compared to other established approaches in sub-lethal ecotoxicology (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor decades, we have known that chemicals affect human and wildlife behavior. Moreover, due to recent technological and computational advances, scientists are now increasingly aware that a wide variety of contaminants and other environmental stressors adversely affect organismal behavior and subsequent ecological outcomes in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. There is also a groundswell of concern that regulatory ecotoxicology does not adequately consider behavior, primarily due to a lack of standardized toxicity methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn previous studies there was evidence of endocrine disruption in fish in waterways contaminated with leachate from a Swedish landfill. Symptoms included fewer sexually mature (SM) female perch (Perca fluviatilis), distinct sores, reduced gonadosomatic index, and decreased plasma androgen levels. Based on previous findings it was hypothesized that the decrease in plasma androgen concentrations could have been caused by increased steroid excretion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Molnbyggen, a leachate-contaminated lake in Sweden, effects on the reproductive system of perch included a decreased frequency of sexually mature female perch, reduced gonadosomatic index and decreased plasma levels of androstenedione and testosterone, but the contaminants responsible for these effects have not yet been identified. A biomarker-directed fractionation approach could be used to narrow the search for the compound(s) responsible for the adverse effects in Molnbyggen female perch. Thus, it is important to develop and test a suitable biomarker, which can be used in this type of approach.
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