tangledline
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2008
- Messages
- 566
Chemicals in Hamilton Harbour appear to be the cause of the changing appearance of sexual organs of some fish.
The latest evidence comes from round gobies sampled not far from Randle Reef and its toxic coal tar deposits.
McMaster University biologist Joanna Wilson says males of the small invasive species are being found with feminine papillae, genital skin flaps that are generally long and thin in males and shorter and fatter in females.
“They’re kind of, not really, like males. They’re becoming feminized,†she said Saturday at a Bay Area Restoration Council workshop on emerging threats to the harbour.
“We don’t know whether they can reproduce normally.â€
Some of the male gobies sampled at Grindstone Creek, Cootes Paradise and Sherman Inlet also produce vitellogenin, an egg yolk protein normally only found in females.
“We never expect male fish to produce this,†Wilson said.
“This is really scary,†she said of the goby research and earlier studies that found feminized male white perch in Cootes Paradise — where effluent from the Dundas sewage treatment plant carries residues of prescription drugs.
Wilson said prescription drug use is growing around the world and “what goes in, comes out.â€
She said the residues are not there from drugs dumped in toilets or the garbage as much as “it’s us taking drugs,†and little is known about the effects on fish of individual chemicals.
The latest evidence comes from round gobies sampled not far from Randle Reef and its toxic coal tar deposits.
McMaster University biologist Joanna Wilson says males of the small invasive species are being found with feminine papillae, genital skin flaps that are generally long and thin in males and shorter and fatter in females.
“They’re kind of, not really, like males. They’re becoming feminized,†she said Saturday at a Bay Area Restoration Council workshop on emerging threats to the harbour.
“We don’t know whether they can reproduce normally.â€
Some of the male gobies sampled at Grindstone Creek, Cootes Paradise and Sherman Inlet also produce vitellogenin, an egg yolk protein normally only found in females.
“We never expect male fish to produce this,†Wilson said.
“This is really scary,†she said of the goby research and earlier studies that found feminized male white perch in Cootes Paradise — where effluent from the Dundas sewage treatment plant carries residues of prescription drugs.
Wilson said prescription drug use is growing around the world and “what goes in, comes out.â€
She said the residues are not there from drugs dumped in toilets or the garbage as much as “it’s us taking drugs,†and little is known about the effects on fish of individual chemicals.