水生污染与毒理学杂志 开放获取

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Effects of 17α-ethinylestradiol and Density on Juvenile Fathead Minnow Survival and Body Size

Tawni B. Riepe*, Brian W. Avila, Dana L. Winkelman

Anthropogenic changes have led to the increased use of wastewater treatment plants in stream systems near urbanized areas. Synthetic oral contraceptives, observed in wastewater treatment effluents, can cause negative effects on fish life history metrics. Previous exposures of 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) have been shown to affect survival and reproduction of fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas). However, density effects were not considered, and additional research is needed to examine the role of density among fish exposed to EE2. Multiple hypotheses indicate the interaction of density with contaminant exposure may ameliorate or exacerbate mortality. We examined how nominal EE2 concentrations of 0 ng/L, 5 ng/L, and 10 ng/L affect body size and mortality at various densities. Fish body size was influenced by density but not EE2 exposure. When density was high, we did not detect an effect of EE2 exposure on mortality. However, when density was low, EE2 exposures increased mortality. Thus, toxic effects of EE2 exposures were observable at low density but at high density, density-dependence in body size and mortality overwhelmed the effect of EE2. The results from our study provide insight into the relationship between density and EE2 exposures on fish survival and can be used to adjust population dynamic parameters for more accurate population dynamic estimates.