Expert calls for stronger stance
on chemicals and drugs that are likely to have ‘sub-lethal’ effects on
wildlife
Monday 3 July 2017 13:00 BST
Tougher controls should be
considered on chemicals that can feminise male fish and cause other
“sub-lethal” effects, a leading ecotoxicologist has said.
Nearly 10 years after he helped
reveal how significant an impact human drugs were having on wildlife, Professor
Charles Tyler has warned that scientists are becoming increasingly concerned
about the consequences of thousands of waste substances.
Professor Tyler, of Exeter
University, will talk about the issue in a speech at the 50th Anniversary
Symposium of the Fisheries
Society in the British Isles.
He took part in a major study in
2008 that found nearly a quarter of male roach fish taken from 51 sites on
English rivers showed signs of becoming female, such as
having eggs in their testicles.
In some rivers, all the male
roach were found to have been feminised to a degree because of high levels of
oestrogen, which is used along with progestin in birth-control pills to prevent
ovulation and is also present in other drugs.
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