Abstract
This review describes the research that has been carried out into estrogenic effects occurring in aquatic environments, both freshwater and marine, and the substances found to be responsible. In summary, estrogenic (and probably some anti-androgenic) activity has mainly been detected in a variety of treated sewage and other effluents, but also as a result of certain chemical spills and deliberate applications. This activity has resulted in a number of effects in vertebrate wildlife that can best be described as feminization, although the severity of these effects ranges from biomarkers of exposure such as vitellogenin induction in males through to morphological changes in sex organs and complete sex reversal. The implications of these changes for the future of aquatic wildlife populations have not yet been thoroughly explored. It is unlikely that all the causative substances have yet been discovered, but those which have been positively identified include natural and synthetic estrogenic hormones, natural plant sterols, synthetic alkylphenols, and certain organochlorine substances. The review concludes that there is now a need to investigate the consequences for wildlife populations of exposure to these materials, by means of a variety of field experiments and investigations.
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