Investigating potential for effects of environmental endocrine disrupters on wild populations of amphibians in UK and Japan: status of historical databases and review of methods.

Daniel B Pickford, Severine Larroze, Minoru Takase, Naoko Mitsui, Osamu Tooi, Noriaki Santo
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Abstract

Concern over global declines among amphibians has resulted in increased interest in the effects of environmental contaminants on amphibian populations, and more recently, this has stimulated research on the potential adverse effects of environmental endocrine disrupters in amphibians. Laboratory studies of the effects of single chemicals on endocrine-relevant endpoints in amphibian, mainly anuran, models are valuable in characterizing sensitivity at the individual level and may yield useful bioassays for screening chemicals for endocrine toxicity (for example, thyroid disrupting activity). Nevertheless, in the UK and Japan as in many other countries, it has yet to be demonstrated unequivocally that the exposure of native amphibians to endocrine disrupting environmental contaminants results in adverse effects at the population level. Assessing the potential of such effects is likely to require an ecoepidemiological approach to investigate associations between predicted or actual exposure of amphibians to (endocrine disrupting) environmental contaminants and biologically meaningful responses at the population level. In turn, this demands recent but relatively long-term population trend data. We review two potential sources of such data for widespread UK anurans that could be used in such investigations: records for common frogs and common toads in several databases maintained by the Biological Records Centre (UK Government Centre for Ecology and Hydrology), and adult toad count data from 'Toads on Roads' schemes registered with the UK wildlife charity 'Froglife'. There were little abundance data in the BRC databases that could be used for this purpose, while count data from the Toads on Roads schemes is potentially confounded by the effects of local topology on the detection probabilities and operation of nonchemical anthropogenic stressors. For Japan, local and regional surveys of amphibians and national ecological censuses gathering amphibian data were reviewed to compile survey methodologies and these were compared with methods used in the UK and other countries. Substantial consensus exists in amphibian survey methodologies and this should be exploited in the initiation of coordinated monitoring programs for widespread and common anuran amphibians in Japan and the UK to generate long-term robust and standardized population trend data. Such data would support comparative ecoepidemiological assessments of the impact of environmental endocrine disrupters in these two cooperating countries.

调查环境内分泌干扰物对英国和日本野生两栖动物种群的潜在影响:历史数据库的现状和方法的回顾。
由于对全球两栖动物数量减少的关注,人们对环境污染物对两栖动物种群的影响越来越感兴趣,最近,这刺激了对环境内分泌干扰物对两栖动物潜在不利影响的研究。实验室研究单一化学品对两栖动物(主要是两栖动物)内分泌相关端点的影响,这些模型在描述个体敏感性方面很有价值,并可能产生有用的生物分析方法,用于筛选化学品的内分泌毒性(例如,甲状腺干扰活性)。然而,在英国和日本,就像在许多其他国家一样,还没有明确证明本地两栖动物暴露于干扰内分泌的环境污染物会在种群水平上产生不利影响。评估这种影响的可能性可能需要一种生态流行病学方法来调查两栖动物对(内分泌干扰)环境污染物的预测或实际暴露与种群水平上有生物学意义的反应之间的关系。反过来,这需要近期但相对长期的人口趋势数据。我们回顾了可用于此类调查的广泛分布的英国anurans的两个潜在数据来源:生物记录中心(英国政府生态和水文学中心)维护的几个数据库中普通青蛙和普通蟾蜍的记录,以及在英国野生动物慈善机构“Froglife”注册的“道路上的蟾蜍”计划中的成年蟾蜍计数数据。BRC数据库中可用于此目的的丰度数据很少,而来自道路蟾蜍计划的计数数据可能会被局部拓扑对非化学人为压力源的检测概率和操作的影响所混淆。在日本,收集两栖动物数据的地方和区域调查和国家生态普查被审查,以编制调查方法,并与英国和其他国家使用的方法进行比较。在两栖动物调查方法上存在着实质性的共识,这应该在日本和英国广泛和常见的无脊椎两栖动物的协调监测计划的启动中得到利用,以产生长期可靠和标准化的种群趋势数据。这些数据将支持对这两个合作国家的环境内分泌干扰物的影响进行比较生态流行病学评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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