Abstract

The main component of classical contraceptives, 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2), has high estrogenic activity even at environmentally relevant concentrations. Although estrogenic endocrine disrupting compounds are assumed to contribute to the worldwide decline of amphibian populations by adverse effects on sexual differentiation, evidence for EE2 affecting amphibian mating behaviour is lacking. In this study, we demonstrate that EE2 exposure at five different concentrations (0.296 ng/L, 2.96 ng/L, 29.64 ng/L, 2.96 µg/L and 296.4 µg/L) can disrupt the mating behavior of adult male Xenopus laevis. EE2 exposure at all concentrations lowered male sexual arousal, indicated by decreased proportions of advertisement calls and increased proportions of the call type rasping, which characterizes a sexually unaroused state of a male. Additionally, EE2 at all tested concentrations affected temporal and spectral parameters of the advertisement calls, respectively. The classical and highly sensitive biomarker vitellogenin, on the other hand, was only induced at concentrations equal or higher than 2.96 µg/L. If kept under control conditions after a 96 h EE2 exposure (2.96 µg/L), alterations of male advertisement calls vanish gradually within 6 weeks and result in a lower sexual attractiveness of EE2 exposed males toward females as demonstrated by female choice experiments. These findings indicate that exposure to environmentally relevant EE2 concentrations can directly disrupt male mate calling behavior of X. laevis and can indirectly affect the mating behavior of females. The results suggest the possibility that EE2 exposure could reduce the reproductive success of EE2 exposed animals and these effects might contribute to the global problem of amphibian decline.

Highlights

  • The estrogen 17a-ethinylestradiol (EE2) is a main component of many classical contraceptives

  • We found prompt and significant impacts of EE2 exposure on male mate calling behavior of X. laevis at environmentally relevant concentrations below the threshold of the classical and highly sensitive estrogenic biomarker Vtg induction

  • EE2 exposure concentrations as low as 0.296 ng/ L alter spectral and temporal parameters of advertisement calls (AC) of male X. laevis and these immediate effects remain over four weeks

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Summary

Introduction

The estrogen 17a-ethinylestradiol (EE2) is a main component of many classical contraceptives. EE2 is a compound of high concern, because it is excreted unmetabolized through faces and urine [6,7] and enters the environment via wastewater effluents [8]. It displays high estrogenic activity even at extremely low concentrations [9,10] and has been detected in effluents [11,12,13] and surface waters [11,14,15] at concentrations ranging from 7–64 ng/L and 0.1–30 ng/L, respectively. EE2 could even be detected in drinking water at concentrations of up to 1.4 ng/L [16,17]

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