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| Title: | Reproductive effects in two species of native freshwater gastropod mollusc exposed to 17β-oestradiol or an environmentally relevant mixture of oestrogenic chemicals in outdoor mesocosms |
| Authors: | Baynes, Alice Louise |
| Advisors: | Routledge, E Jobling, S |
| Keywords: | Sewage Prosobranch Pulmonate Sexual development |
| Publication Date: | 2009 |
| Publisher: | Brunel University Institute for the Environment PhD Theses |
| Abstract: | Recent evidence suggests that molluscs may be sensitive to the effects of endocrine
disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in a similar manner to vertebrates, such as fish. Despite this
(with the exception of TBT-induced imposex in marine gastropods), molluscs have been
largely overlooked in the field of endocrine disruption. Life-cycle studies were conducted
in which two species of native UK freshwater gastropod molluscs (the hermaphrodite
Planorbarius corneus and the gonochorist Viviparus viviparus) were exposed to either
17β-oestradiol or environmentally relevant mixtures of chemicals known to be oestrogenic
to vertebrates and to be present in UK treated sewage effluents (TSE) and rivers. Adult
snails were exposed for four months in outdoor mesocosms, fed by river water, over the
spring and summer (breeding season) in order to examine effects on reproductive output,
growth and mortality. Furthermore, offspring (F1s) were also developmentally exposed
over the same period. F1 juvenile snails were then depurated in river water for nine months
(over winter) after which time their growth, survival, and reproductive success were
measured in further un-dosed river water mesocosm studies in the following
spring/summer. Histopathology was used to determine immediate effects of chemical
exposure on adult and F1 snails’ reproductive health. Histopathology was also used to
determine long lasting effects of chemical exposure on depurated F1s. Exposure to
oestrogenic chemicals resulted in a range of effects, including modulated fecundity and
growth in F0 adults, to retardation of growth, sexual development and fecundity in
developmentally exposed F1s. Exposure to mixtures of oestrogenic chemicals also resulted
in possible modulation of the immune system, resulting in increased parasitism and over
winter mortality of exposed F1s compared to snails exposed to river water alone.
Differences in sensitivity and response to exposure between the two species and the
generations were also observed. |
| Description: | This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University. |
| URI: | http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/4194 |
| Appears in Collections: | Institute for the Environment Theses Environment
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