by Christian Evans
Pollutants such as pesticides and toxins damage the ecosystem and cause a
variety of damaging ailments in humans. One particular herbicide, Atrazine, has
now been found to turn male frogs into hermaphrodites, rendering them impotent
by causing their gonads to produce eggs.
A subject of great scientific and political controversy, Atrazine was first
introduced in 1958 and today is one of the most widely used herbicides in the
world. It is a potential carcinogen and has a half-life in soil of anywhere from
15 to 100 days. This time allows for Atrazine biodegration, during which the
chemical is dechlorinated until it produces a an end product of cyanuric acid, a
toxic compound.
Atrazine is also used throughout the world in the production of maize, sorghum,
sugar cane, pineapples, chemical fallows, grassland, macadamia nuts, conifers
forestry, roses and grassland. Its most common application is for use in
conservation tillage systems to prevent soil erosion and runoff, and to prevent
weeds from growing in major crops.
As a result, a good deal of the Atrazine applied to crops is washed into rivers,
streams, lakes and municipal drinking
water supplies.
In 2002, a breakthrough study on the environmental effects of Atrazine was
led by Dr. Tyrone B. Hayes, an associate professor of integrative biology at the
University of California at Berkeley. The research revealed that Atrazine not
only contaminates ground and surface water, but also is an endocrine disruptor
-- chemically castrating all male
amphibians by stripping
them of a key hormone. This appears to have had a major impact on wild
amphibians and is likely to be an important contributor to this species' global
decline.
"What struck us as unbelievable was that Atrazine could cause such dramatic
effects at such low levels," said Hayes. "If you take five grains of salt,
divide this weight by five thousand, that is the amount of Atrazine that causes
these abnormalities. Atrazine-exposed frogs don't have normal reproductive
systems. The males have ovaries in their testes and much smaller vocal organs.
"The use of Atrazine in
the environment is basically an uncontrolled experiment -- there seems to be
no Atrazine-free environment. Because it is so widespread, aquatic environments
are at risk. It is obviously affecting frogs. We have shown serious effects on
their sexual development. Some had three ovaries and three testes, some had
ovaries on one side and testes on the other, one animal even had six testes…We
need to ask the questions, 'What are the environmental costs of using Atrazine?
What diversity have we lost?'"
Evidently, however, hermaphroditism in frogs is a well-known phenomenon that has
been monitored and studied for decades all over the world. The study claims that
even at low concentrations (1/30th the dose deemed safe by
the EPA), Atrazine may
cause hermaphroditism in North American frogs. It has also been shown to lower
hormone and testosterone levels in sexually mature male frogs to much lower than
normal female frogs. At this point, it is still unclear whether Atrazine leads
to reduced fertility, but the likelihood seems to be that this would impair a
frog's ability to breed and produce offspring.
The study research was done without any industry financing provided to Dr. Hayes
and his coauthors. Hayes originally had been hired as a consultant by Ecorisk
(now Syngenta) in order to conduct research on Atrazine and its effects on the
environment. The results of the study were later published in April 2002 in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, and in October 2002 in
Nature magazine.
"This is very important and elegant work," said Theo Colborn, Ph.D.,a senior
scientist at the World Wildlife Fund. Colborn is recognized worldwide for his
expertise with endocrine disrupting chemicals. "Tyrone's work demonstrates the
need to do research on the safety of chemicals in the field where the animals
live and at the levels to which they are exposed. The changes he found in the
gonads were not discovered with the traditional high-dose Atrazine experiments
used in the past. In addition, microscopic examination of the internal organs of
the frogs is required to detect the hidden effects from low-dose exposure."
Atrazine has been widely used by approximately 80 countries over the last 40
years. However, it has been recently banned in several countries, including
France, Germany, Italy, Sweden and Norway. The weed killer is still on sale in
the UK, as well as in the U.S.
The EPA and its independent Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) scrutinized this
study in 2003, concluding there was not enough information or data to determine
if amphibian development was affected by Atrazine. They classified this
herbicide as "not likely"
to be carcinogenic in 2003, even recommending that the chemical's registration
be renewed. According to the EPA, they did "not find any results among the
available studies that would lead us to conclude that a potential
cancer risk is likely from
exposure to Atrazine."
However, the EPA also claimed in 2003, based on Hayes' research, that there was
"sufficient evidence" to conclude there is a definite chance that Atrazine does
affect amphibian reproduction and reproductive organs. The EPA was unwilling to
concede --stating that these results were not consistent enough to justify a
national ban on the chemical.
In August of that year, The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) brought
forth a lawsuit against EPA. The council charged that the EPA had failed to
protect endangered species and the environment from the toxic effects of
Atrazine. This was due to statements made by the EPA that this chemical has the
potential to cause harm to endangered species, even though it was allowed to
remain on the market.
In October 2007, the EPA will release their evaluation on the validity of
Atrazine research and the effects this chemical has on amphibian gonadal
development. These findings will be presented to the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP). These
findings will include newer scientific research that was conducted in 2005/2006
by Syngenta Crop Protection, Inc. and any open literature studies that were
evaluated by the EPA.
"Atrazine is just one of a long list of
pesticides thought to
have hormone disrupting effects and many of these turn up in our food as
residues," said Sandra Bell, a pesticides campaigner with the Friends of the
Earth environmental organization. "In fact, we've seen recent evidence that
farmers are finding that
the pesticides that the bio-tech companies sell to them to go with the GM crops
are just not effective -- they're not working -- and therefore the farmers are
actually resorting to older very toxic chemicals. Gender bending effects on fish
and frogs raise serious concerns about the impact such chemicals are having on
our wildlife, especially as the effects were found at such low levels. But even
more alarming is the potential for these products to affect human health.
"I think it's clear that people don't want pesticides in their food but also
that it's not just a simple issue of banning all pesticides overnight. Clearly
that would be very difficult for our farmers and farmers in other countries. So
what we need is a process of phasing out these chemicals and replacing them with
safer alternatives and replacing them with different methods of
farming. For that we do
need a commitment of resources from the Government and from the retailers to
carry out research and development into different ways of farming, but also into
safer products that don't leave residues in our food."
In addition to the work conducted by Professor Hayes, similar research conducted
by Warren P. Porter of the University of Wisconsin at Madison claims that
Atrazine may also disrupt other hormonal systems in amphibious creatures.
There are still those, however, who refuse to take these findings as fact.
According to Alex Avery, Director of Research and Education at the Center for
Global Food Issues (CGFI), there are many other variables that could easily be
responsible for and explain amphibious hermaphroditism, such as parasites,
viruses, temperature and any number of other natural factors. "Hayes's latest
study is reminiscent of recent peer-reviewed studies that tried to link
pesticides to frog limb abnormalities, but were debunked after further studies
found natural parasitic flatworms to be the cause. Until this work has been
corroborated by other labs, it must be considered preliminary and inconclusive,"
said Avery
Amid recent concerns about human and ecological health, environmental
campaigners are calling for a ban on Atrazine. Due to the research done on this
chemical by Hayes and others in the field, Atrazine now has been banned or
restricted in Austria, Slovenia, Germany, Denmark, Italy, France and the UK.
The effects of Atrazine on frogs were examined prior to Hayes' work, but similar
abnormalities had not been reported. This is what is primarily fueling the
debate over these findings -- that Hayes and his colleagues are the only ones so
far willing to state these findings as fact. So far, no other independent
studies have found anything similar.
The reason, according to Hayes, is that "they were looking for the wrong things.
Most people were looking for external deformities, mortality or cancer. Atrazine-induced
abnormalities are subtler -- it took a year of experimentation before even we
noticed the consequences." Since then, more independent and industry research
has been conducted on Atrazine; many of the current conclusions are very similar
to those previously made by Hayes.
Other names used by chemical companies and pesticide manufacturers to designate
the herbicide "Atrazine" include:
2-chloro-4-(2-propylamino)-6-ethylamino-s-triazine,
2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine,
2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine,
2-chloro-4-(isopropylamino)-6-ethylamino-s-triazine, Ortho St. Augustine Weed
and Feed, 6-chloro-N-ethyl-N-isopropyl-s-triazine-2,4-diamine, A 361, AAtrex,
AAtrex 4L, AAtrex 80W, AAtrex Nine-O, Actinite PK, Akticon, Aktikon, Aktikon PK,
Aktinit A, Aktinit PK, Argezin, Atrazinax, Atranex, Atrasine, Atrataf, Atratol,
Atratol A, Atrazine, Atrazine 4L, Atrazine 80W, Atrazines, Atred, Atrex, Attrex,
ATZ, Azinotox 500, Candex, Cekuzina-T, Chromozin, Crisamina, Crisatrina,
Crisazine, Crisazina, Cyazine, Extrazine II, Farmco, Fenamine, Fenatrol, Fogard,
G30027, Geigy 30027, Gesaprim, Gesaprim 50, Gesaprim 500, Gesoprim, Griffex,
Griffex 4L, Hungazin, Hungazin PK, Inakor, Laddock, Maizina, Mebazine,
Oleogesaprim, Oleogesaprim 200, Pitezin, Primatol, Primatol A, Primaze, Radizine,
Radazine, Scotts Bonus Type S, Strazine, Triazine A 1294, Vectal, Vectal SC,
Vectral SC, Weedex, Weedex A, Wonuk, Zeaphos, Zeapos, and Zeazin.
http://www.newstarget.com/021995.html
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