ANOTHER PESTICIDE SURPRISE
The decline and disappearance of frog populations worldwide
remains a mystery, despite efforts by hundreds of scientists to
determine the causes. (See REHW #380, #441.) The other major
problem facing frogs --massive deformities observed since 1995
among frog populations in California, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri,
Ontario, Quebec, South Dakota, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin[1]
--is now better understood. (See REHW #515, #590.)
During the past six months, press interviews with research
scientists, and published studies, have shed a bit of light on
both problems though true consensus has not yet emerged on either
one. No one is even sure whether the two problems are connected,
though new evidence indicates they are.
Some scientists still doubt that frogs are actually disappearing
worldwide. They prefer to believe that the simultaneous declines
and disappearances of frog populations in North and South
America, Europe, and Australia reported since 1980 are nothing
more than the normal ups and downs of any wild population.
However, SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN said in August that the "majority
viewpoint" among scientists now is that the widespread declines
and disappearances are "highly abnormal."[2] "I think we're
close to consensus now," says David Wake, a well-known frog
researcher at the University of California at Berkeley.[3]
There are roughly 5000 species of amphibians worldwide. Of
these, 242 inhabit the U.S. A recent study by the Nature
Conservancy and the Natural Heritage Network identified 92 of
these 242 (or 38%) as endangered, imperiled, or vulnerable[2]
(meaning they are likely to become extinct within 5, 20, or 100
years if present trends continue.)
James La Clair at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla,
California, says, "Although amphibians have lived on this planet
for over 300 million years, nearly 120 times [as long as] modern
man, reports within the last three decades have shown that
numerous amphibian species are either suffering from serious
population loss or have disappeared altogether."[1] La Clair
says there are very likely "a collection of causes," but one way
or another they can all be traced back to "the expansion of
humankind." Loss of frog habitat --chiefly wetlands --is
probably the biggest single cause. Global warming and
accompanying droughts may contribute because frogs develop from
eggs that thrive in water. The artificial stocking of streams
with trout and bass plays a role, too. Pesticides and other
chemicals certainly exacerbate the problem (more on this below).
Laboratory experiments have shown beyond doubt that ultraviolet
light from the sun can interfere with the development of frogs'
eggs.[4] Acid rain may contribute to the problem as well.
Humans eating frogs' legs in large quantities are not helping.
And there are other causes, such as infectious agents.
A group of Australian researchers reported this summer that they
have identified one particular fungus that is killing frogs in
locations as far apart as Queensland, Australia and Panama in
Central America.[5] The fungus --which has never before been
reported to harm any vertebrate species --causes changes in the
skin of frogs, somehow contributing to their deaths. The
mechanism is not understood, but frogs breathe oxygen through
their skin and the fungus may cause suffocation.
No one knows why an ancient fungus would suddenly start killing
frogs in places as far apart as Australia and Panama. It is
conceivable that the fungus was transported to these places only
recently on the boots or equipment of researchers studying the
disappearance of frogs. Another possibility is that the fungus
has been present in these locations for a long time but frogs are
now succumbing to it because their immune systems have been
impaired by recent changes in the environment. One candidate
would be increased ultraviolet light, which is well-known to
damage the immune systems of many animals, including frogs. In
recent years, chlorinated chemicals released by humans have
thinned the protective layer of ozone in the upper atmosphere,
thus allowing about 10% more ultraviolet light from the sun to
reach the surface of the Earth.[6]
Certain industrial chemicals released into the environment may
also be damaging the immune systems of frogs. One particular
class of chemicals --called retinoids --has come under strong
suspicion because retinoids can cause severe birth defects in
many animals, including frogs and humans. The medicine Accutane,
prescribed for treating acne, is a retinoid known to cause major
birth defects in humans.
The deformities now being found in large numbers of frogs at many
locations in the U.S. and Canada are grotesque. Herpetologists
(scientists who study amphibians and reptiles) have reported
finding frogs with missing legs, extra legs, misshapen legs,
paralyzed legs that stick out from the body at odd places, legs
that are webbed together with extra skin, legs that are fused to
the body, and legs that split into two half-way down. They have
also found frogs with missing eyes and extra eyes. One one-eyed
frog in Minnesota had a second eye growing inside its throat.
Dr. David Gardiner, a research biologist at the University of
California at Irvine, has been studying retinoids for at least a
decade, and in recent years he has probed frog deformities.[7]
To him, retinoids are the obvious culprit in the mystery of the
misshapen frogs because of the peculiar kind of limb deformities
being observed. "There is no other known mechanism for this
[besides retinoids]," Gardiner says. "Much of early development
is controlled by retinoids," he says. "Our body [and the body of
a frog] is completely dependent on them," he told a reporter.[8]
Exposure to retinoids could also make frogs more susceptible to
infectious diseases, Gardiner says: "The kinds of chemicals that
would target development of limbs would target all organ
systems," including the immune system. Frogs with abnormal legs
would also very likely have abnormal immune systems. This could
explain why some frogs are now suddenly falling victim to
infectious agents that they resisted for millions of years.
James La Clair and his associates at the Scripps Research
Institute in La Jolla, California, recently showed that a popular
anti-mosquito insecticide, called S-methoprene, breaks down in
the environment to several different kinds of retinoids.[1]
Under laboratory conditions, La Clair was able to show that the
ultraviolet light in sunlight causes S-methoprene to break down
into half a dozen retinoids, and that these retinoids in turn can
cause frog deformities of the kind being seen now in the U.S. and
Canada.
S-methoprene was introduced in the 1970s to control mosquitoes,
which breed in water. It is sold under trade names like Altosid,
APEX, Diacon, Dianex, Kabat, Manta, Minex, Pharoid, Precor,
Yuvemon, and ZR 515.
It is also widely sold in flea powders. La Clair calculates that
the amount of flea power used to treat a ten-pound pet one time
contains enough S-methoprene to contaminate 110,000 liters of
water to a level that would cause deformities in frogs.[1]
S-methoprene is also widely used in agriculture to treat cattle
gazing areas, tobacco, and certain grain crops. It is also
sometimes added to cattle feed.
S-methoprene mimics a hormone that inhibits developing pupae from
molting; thus it is known as an "insect growth regulator."
Because vertebrate species do not have a pupal stage of growth,
scientists assumed S-methoprene could not harm amphibians or
mammals. When fed to mammals, S-methoprene is about as toxic as
sugar.
Now La Clair's work has shown that this seemingly-harmless
chemical can be transformed into a potent teratogen by exposure
to sunlight for just a few hours. The implications of this
research, which was reported in ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY, a journal of the American Chemical Society, are
profound. For one thing, it means that once again the pesticide
regulators at U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [EPA] have
missed a key feature of a chemical whose safety they regulate.
Secondly, it shows once again that relying on risk assessment
leads to bad public health decisions. EPA's risk assessments
have routinely failed to evaluate the breakdown by-products of
the pesticidal chemicals that the agency has deemed safe enough
to allow as residues on our dinner plates. Third, it means that
thousands of pesticides now in common use need to be re-tested to
see if their breakdown by-products are dangerous to humans or
other species. However, this additional testing is unlikely to
occur any time soon because EPA currently estimates that it is at
least 15 years behind schedule in safety-testing the pesticides
to which we --and the frogs --are currently being exposed.[9]
Indeed, the situation is worse than the agency makes it out to
be. Congress ordered EPA to re-evaluate and modernize all
pesticide safety tests in 1972, and it demanded that the agency
complete the job by 1977. Since 1972 the Agency has been doing
its best to comply, but each year new revelations have come to
light, new evidence showing that pesticides can harm humans and
the environment in ways that no one imagined, so additional tests
have been required. Thus La Clair's work is just the latest
surprise in a long chain of unpleasant surprises. EPA officials
in 1996 estimated that they will complete their pesticide safety
re-evaluations (which they were ordered by Congress to complete
in 1977) in the year 2011 --34 years late --IF they can keep the
work on schedule.[9] Meanwhile the frogs and we continue to be
exposed to thousands of poorly-understood government-approved
industrial poisons.
In sum, Dr. La Clair's research into the deformed frogs of North
America serves to remind us that pesticides are now too dangerous
to be safely regulated, even by the most powerful government the
world has ever known.
Or is it that PESTICIDE MANUFACTURING CORPORATIONS are now too
dangerous to be safely regulated, even by the most powerful
government the world has ever known? It's a fair question.
--Peter Montague
(National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO) |
| [1] James J. La Clair and others, "Photoproducts and Metabolites
of a Common Insect Growth Regulator Produce Developmental
Deformities in XENOPUS," ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Vol.
32, No. 10 (1998), pgs. 1453-1461.
[2] Rodger Doyle, "Amphibians at Risk," SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
August, 1998, pg. 27.
[3] William Souder, "Evidence Grows, Suspects Elusive in Frogs'
Disappearance," WASHINGTON POST July 6, 1998, pg. A3.
[4] Andrew R. Blaustein and others, "UV repair and resistance to
solar UV-B in amphibian eggs: A link to population declines?"
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES Vol. 91 (March
1994), pgs. 1791-1795.
[5] Lee Berger and others, "Chytridiomycosis causes amphibian
mortality associated with population declines in the rain forests
of Australia and Central America," PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL
ACADEMY OF SCIENCES Vol. 95 (July 1998), pgs. 9031-9036. See
also Jocelyn Kaiser, "Fungus May Drive Frog Genocide," SCIENCE
Vol. 281, No. 5373 (July 3, 1998), pg. 23; and see Carol Kaesuk
Moon, "Newly Found Fungus Tied to Vanishing Frog Species," NEW
YORK TIMES June 28, 1998, pg. unknown. This is not the first
fungus linked to frog deaths; see Andrew R. Blaustein and others,
"Pathogenic Fungus Contributes to Amphibian Losses in the Pacific
Northwest," BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION Vol. 67 (1994), pgs. 251-254.
[6] J.B Kerr and C.T. McElroy, "Evidence for Large Upward Trends
of Ultraviolet-B radiation Linked to Ozone Depletion," SCIENCE
Vol. 262 (November 12, 1993), pgs. 1032-1034. See also Mario
Blumthaler and Walter Ambach, "Indication of Increasing Solar
Ultraviolet-B Radiation Flux in Alpine Regions," SCIENCE Vol. 248
(April 13, 1990), pgs. 206-208.
[7] See http://darwin.bio.uci.edu/mrjc/Whoweare/Dave.html.
[8] Maggie Fox, "Common chemical may be to blame for dead frogs,"
Reuters wire service August 5, 1998.
[9] John Wargo, OUR CHILDREN'S TOXIC LEGACY; HOW SCIENCE AND LAW
FAIL TO PROTECT US FROM PESTICIDES (New Haven, Conn.: Yale
University Press, 1996), chapter 5.
Descriptor terms: frogs; amphibians; epa; regulation;
pesticides; s-methoprene; hormone disrupters; retinoids; |