ECOTOXICOLOGY: AMPHIBIANS
FROGS AND TOADS
Ujhegyi N., Bókony V. (2020): Skin coloration as a possible non-invasive marker for skewed sex ratios and gonadal abnormalities in immature common toads (Bufo bufo). Ecological Indicators 113: 106175.
FULL TEXT
Abstract
Environmental pollution and climate change can bias the sex ratios of animal populations in which sexual development is sensitive to environmental contaminants and temperature. Investigating these effects in field studies and ecotoxicological experiments is important but difficult when males and females cannot be distinguished without sacrificing them or applying expensive, specialized sexing methods. In this study, we examined the utility of skin coloration as a non-invasive sex marker in juvenile common toads (Bufo bufo) that appear sexually monomorphic. We raised toadlets from eggs in the lab, and exposed them during larval development to one of six treatments: two concentrations of two endocrine disruptor chemicals each (a glyphosate-based herbicide and 17α-ethinylestradiol, a contraceptive) and two controls. Before the first hibernation, we took a photograph of each toadlet’s back, then sexed them by inspecting their gonads, and measured the hue, saturation and brightness of their dorsal skin coloration from the photographs. We found significant sexual dichromatism with males being yellower-greener (less red) and brighter than females; 34% of males and 85% of females could be categorized correctly based on objective colour measurements from photographs. The ratio of greenish and reddish individuals as categorized subjectively by human vision correlated strongly with the sex ratio of treatment groups. Treatment with 1 µg/L 17α-ethinylestradiol resulted in 100% females, with similar coloration as normal females. Intersex individuals occurred in treatment groups with 3 µg/L glyphosate and 1 ng/L 17α-ethinylestradiol; these animals were less saturated and darker reddish-brown compared to normal individuals. These results suggest that skin coloration can indicate phenotypic sex and gonadal abnormalities in common toads. Although skin colour measurement in itself is insufficient for identifying an individual’s sex or the sex ratio of a single group, it can be useful for qualitative comparisons of sex ratios between groups when no other means of phenotypic sexing is possible. We propose that counting the number of greenish and reddish individuals as seen by the human eye is a cheap and fast non-invasive method for identifying natural populations or experimental groups that may have skewed sex ratios compared to other groups, and this approach is worth testing in other species to help conservation practices and non-destructive ecotoxicological experiments.
Adams E., Leeb C., Brühl C. A. (2021): Pesticide exposure affects reproductive capacity of common toads (Bufo bufo) in a viticultural landscape. Ecotoxicology 30: 213-223.
FULL TEXT
Abstract
Amphibian populations are declining worldwide at alarming rates. Among the large variety of contributing stressors, chemical pollutants like pesticides have been identified as a major factor for this decline. Besides direct effects on aquatic and terrestrial amphibian stages, sublethal effects like impairments in reproduction can affect a population. Therefore, we investigated the reproductive capacity of common toads (Bufo bufo) in the pesticide-intensive viticultural landscape of Palatinate in Southwest Germany along a pesticide gradient. In a semi-field study, we captured reproductively active common toad pairs of five breeding ponds with different pesticide contamination level and kept them in a net cage until spawning. Toads from more contaminated ponds showed an increased fecundity (more eggs) but decreased fertilization rates (fewer hatching tadpoles) as well as lower survival rates and reduced size in Gosner stage 25, suggesting that the higher exposed populations suffer from long-term reproductive impairments. In combination with acute toxicity effects, the detected sublethal effects, which are mostly not addressed in the ecological risk assessment of pesticides, pose a serious threat on amphibian populations in agricultural landscapes.