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Endocrine disruption from plastic pollution and warming interact to increase the energetic cost of growth in a fish
Journal article

Endocrine disruption from plastic pollution and warming interact to increase the energetic cost of growth in a fish

Nicholas Wu, Alexander M. Rubin and Frank Seebacher
Proceedings of the Royal Society B, Vol.289(1967)
2022
PMID: 35078359

Abstract

Biology Ecology Environmental Sciences & Ecology Evolutionary Biology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics Science & Technology
Energetic cost of growth determines how much food-derived energy is needed to produce a given amount of new biomass and thereby influences energy transduction between trophic levels. Growth and development are regulated by hormones and are therefore sensitive to changes in temperature and environmental endocrine disruption. Here, we show that the endocrine disruptor bisphenol A (BPA) at an environmentally relevant concentration (10 mu gl(-1)) decreased fish (Danio rerio) size at 30 degrees C water temperature. Under the same conditions, it significantly increased metabolic rates and the energetic cost of growth across development. By contrast, BPA decreased the cost of growth at cooler temperatures (24 degrees C). BPA-mediated changes in cost of growth were not associated with mitochondrial efficiency (P/O ratios (i.e. adenosine diphosphate (ADP) used/oxygen consumed) and respiratory control ratios) although BPA did increase mitochondrial proton leak. In females, BPA decreased age at maturity at 24 degrees C but increased it at 30 degrees C, and it decreased the gonadosomatic index suggesting reduced investment into reproduction. Our data reveal a potentially serious emerging problem: increasing water temperatures resulting from climate warming together with endocrine disruption from plastic pollution can impact animal growth efficiency, and hence the dynamics and resilience of animal populations and the services these provide.

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#6 Clean Water and Sanitation

Source: InCites

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.60 Herbicides, Pesticides & Ground Poisoning
3.60.357 Endocrine Disruptors
Web Of Science research areas
Biology
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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