Common herbicide used on U.S. crops castrates male frogs
Thursday, May 27, 2010 by: Ethan A. Huff, staff writer
(NaturalNews) The dangers associated with pesticide and herbicide use have
been receiving increased attention in the media these days. Everything from
their contamination of local water supplies to their residue on food has been
making headlines. But a new study has found that one popular weed killer is
actually causing a certain species of frog to turn from male to female.
Atrazine, a popular weed killer used in crop fields, has recently been
implicated in a similar study to cause human birth defects. Scientists have
found that atrazine and other agricultural chemicals are likely responsible for
the significant rise of birth defects throughout the last several decades. But a
recent report from the University of California-Berkeley (UC-B), indicts
atrazine even further.
Biologists from UC-B found that long-term exposure to low levels of atrazine
essentially castrated about 75 percent of the male frogs on which it was tested.
Frogs were exposed to the toxic herbicide at levels of 2.5 parts per billion
(ppb) in water, a level that is 16 percent lower than what the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) considers safe for drinking water. One out
of every ten frogs also ended up turning into a female frog.
Like other pesticides and environmental toxins, atrazine interferes with
hormones. It is an endocrine disruptor that seems to replace testosterone, the
primary male hormone, with estrogen, the primary female hormone. The result is a
severe alteration of normal male function that can actually turn a male into a
female.
"The effects of atrazine in the long term have been shown to demasculinize or
chemically castrate, combined with complete feminization of some animals,"
explained Tyrone Hayes, a biologist and herpetologist from UC-B that led the
study.
The amazing thing about the frogs who experienced the sex change was that they
actually began producing viable eggs. The male frogs who turned female were able
to copulate with naturally male frogs and produce eggs. The other 90 percent of
male frogs exposed to atrazine experienced decreased sperm count, lowered
libidos and diminished fertility.
In typical fashion, some atrazine producers were quick to decry the findings.
"We haven't seen these kinds of responses that Dr. Hayes reports. Some of these
studies are poorly conducted and are entirely inconsistent," explained Keith
Solomon, an environmental toxicologist at the University of Guelph in Ontario,
Canada. Solomon also served as a consultant to Syngenta.
Syngenta's principal scientist, Tim Pastoor, explained in a CNN interview that
atrazine levels within the EPA's guidelines are safe, and that political
pressure is responsible for efforts to get atrazine re-evaluated. Syngenta's
website also purports that atrazine residue on crops and in water are not a
health risk.
Yet of all the available studies on atrazine, only its manufacturers' studies
found that the pesticide is safe. All other independent studies and reviews have
found significant dangers associated with it. It has been continually shown to
lead to cancer, birth defects, and severe endocrine disruption.
In 2004, the European Union (EU) banned atrazine because it was finding levels
of the chemical in its water supplies that consistently exceeded the 0.1 ppb
established threshold. Yet in the U.S., atrazine continues to be used, and is
considered to be acceptable at much higher levels.
Atrazine is most commonly used on corn crops, but is also used on sorghum and
sugar cane. Many farmers love it because it eliminates the need to have to till
the soil. In 2008, it was estimated that over 60 million pounds of atrazine were
used on crops.
A 2006 study by the U.S. Geological Survey found atrazine in nearly
three-quarters of stream water and in roughly 40 percent of all groundwater
supplies. This was based on data collected between 1992 and 2001. It is
difficult to say what kinds of levels would be found on samples taken today.
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), an advocacy group that works to
protect the health of the environment, issued a report in 2009 indicating that
water supplies near agriculture fields that use atrazine are the most
contaminated. Particularly in some midwestern and southern states that have high
agricultural land usage, atrazine levels can be particularly high.
Individuals can remove atrazine from their home water with carbon filters, and
some municipal water systems use the technology as well. It is important to
investigate and take proper measures to ensure that atrazine does not enter your
home through your water.
Ideally, dangerous pesticides like atrazine will eventually be banned and
eliminated from agricultural use. As people become more aware of the severe
negative effects of such poisons on their health and well-being, not to mention
on the environment, it can only be hoped that increased pressure to stop their
use will ensue. And though it cannot be said for sure, atrazine likely has a
similar effect on humans as it does on frogs, and should not be considered safe
at any level.
Sources for this story include:
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/TECH/sc...
http://www.water-research.net/atraz...
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