Skip to main content

Environmental contaminants, climate change, and amphibian development and plasticity.

 

Recently, we have been discussing vertebrate sex determination and the diverse mechanisms that have evolved to control and regulate these important developmental decisions. Traditionally, many vertebrate species have been governed by genetic sex determination (GSD) or environmental sex determination (ESD). However, several studies have found that in many species both GSD and ESD mechanisms operate simultaneously in response to a broad range of heritable and environmental factors. This is thought to be the case for many amphibian species. One aspect of this that I find particularly interesting is the role of environmental contaminations and how they may modify the traditional amphibian sex ratios and the mechanisms of sex determination.  

 

A paper published in 2016 by Max Lambert and colleagues entitled “Interactive effects of road salt and leaf litter on wood frog sex ratios and sexual size dimorphism” had me thinking about the role of not only organic but also inorganic chemical contaminants on vertebrate development. Additionally, a recent paper published in 2021 by Sagan Leggett and colleagues entitled “The Combined Effects of Road Salt and Biotic Stressors on Amphibian Sex Ratios” had me thinking about these questions once again. (Overall, the content of these papers are relevant to the topics we have discussed in class and if you are interested in reading them I have provided the citations at the end.) Furthermore, I have recently been thinking about the broader impacts of climate change and the widespread use of road deicing salts.

 

I grew up in the Midwest where the use of road deicing salts is very common. However, in Georgia (and throughout the south) winter conditions are typically milder and road salts are not commonly used every year. However, as I write this post, a majority of the United States has been recently impacted by an extreme widespread winter storm. North Texas, for example, experienced the coldest day in 72 years, with the Dallas-Fort Worth area reaching a record low temperature of -2 degrees Fahrenheit this week (Irfan). Due to this winter storm, Texas has been documented using road deicing salts throughout the state this year. This had me thinking a lot recently about these past studies done by Lambert et al. in 2016 and Leggett et al. in 2021. Both of these studies were conducted on frog populations in upstate New York, where the use of road salts is common practice. Thus, it is safe to assume that these frog populations have continually been exposed to some concentration of road salt contamination since around the time it was first introduced in the United States in 1938. Therefore, these populations have had the time to be able to adapt and respond in one form or another to road salt contamination. However, the amphibian populations in Texas have not had this same exposure to road salts in the past and therefore, there is the potential for these populations to have a very different response to road salt contaminations. I wonder if these studies (Lambert et al. 2016, Leggett et al. 2021) were repeated with frog populations found in Texas would they find similar results? Is there some sort of exposure threshold required in order for amphibians to have (or evolve) a plastic response? As climate change and unpredictable extreme weather events continues to be a prominent issue in the future, I wonder more broadly how aquatic systems across the country will be increasingly impacted and threatened by novel anthropogenic use of synthetic chemicals and contaminants.

 

Sources:

 

News Article- Texas:

Irfan, Umair. “Scientists are divided over whether climate change is fueling extreme cold events” Vox News, 18 February 2021, https://www.vox.com/22287295/texas-uri-climate-change-cold-polar-vortex-arctic

 

Scientific Papers:

 

Lambert, M. R., Stoler, A. B., Smylie, M. S., Relyea, R. A., & Skelly, D. K. (2017). Interactive effects of road salt and leaf litter on wood frog sex ratios and sexual size dimorphism. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. Journal Canadien Des Sciences Halieutiques et Aquatiques, 74(2), 141–146.

Leggett, S., Borrelli, J., Jones, D. K., & Relyea, R. (2021). The Combined Effects of Road Salt and Biotic Stressors on Amphibian Sex Ratios. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry / SETAC, 40(1), 231–235.

Comments

  1. This is a small thing in the grand scheme of your article, but I thought it was so interesting that the paper discussed to role of road salt on wood frog sex ratios and dimorphism. It seems like such a minute part of life for so many people in the cold months- I had never considered environmental impacts of increased salinity.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Environmental Trade-offs of Increased Antidepressant Use

       I came across an interesting sentiment the other day. In response to the generational expression  “kids have it so easy nowadays” someone replied “that’s the point”. The point of progressing is to make life easier for the next generation. While today’s kids don’t have to walk uphill both ways to get to school, they face their own unique obstacles with the constant pressures from social media and threat of school shootings. The 2021 State Of Mental Health In America survey reports that youth depression is worsening. Statistics show that this disproportionately affects youths who identify as more than one race. However, some statistical growth can be attributed to an increase in diagnoses as the stigma of mental health has changed and more people seek treatment. Along with better access to therapy, access to a variety of antidepressants has increased as well. The CDC reports that from 1999 to 2014 antidepressant use has increased by almost 65% with one in...

A Wasp, a Caterpillar, and a Changing Climate

       Host-parasitoid interactions conjure up rather graphic images of a hoard of small wasps boring through the soft tissue of an unassuming caterpillar. That poor caterpillar. Since I first became aware of this gory dynamic relationship, I always sided with the caterpillar. However, my new-found enthrallment with beneficial insect performing biological control has fostered a new perspective.  The host-parasitoid relationship between the caterpillar and wasp maintains ecological balance. Now, we see climate change can completely throw this delicate system out of whack.      In a recent 2021 paper, Moore et al explore the impacts of fluctuating high temperatures on the development of both the lepidopteran larval host Manduca sexta and the parasitoid wasp Cotesia congregata . A previous study with this same host-parasitoid system had found that parasitoids had reduce survival while hosts underwent accelerated growth under constant elevated temper...

Does developmental environment influence timing of life-history events?

Most of ecotoxicology focusses on immediate effects contaminants have on organisms, drawing conclusions about what this may mean for fitness based on traits like size. However, some negative effects may be unnoticed. For example, transgenerational effects may not impact the exposed generation, but those organisms may produce offspring with lower fitness. This has been shown in beetles exposed to pesticides, where the offspring of an exposed parent had reduced fitness due to transgenerational effects (Baker et al. 2019). Similarly unnoticed, and even further neglected, is how conditions during development may alter the timing of life history events. How do gene x environment interactions influence timing of sexual maturation? Or age at first reproduction? Or even number of offspring during each reproductive event? Many of these questions are unanswered as most research terminates studies well before reproduction, likely due to long generation times and/or cost of maintaining animals. Ad...