2018
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-018-1204-2
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Exposure to the antifouling chemical medetomidine slows development, reduces body mass, and delays metamorphosis in wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus) tadpoles

Abstract: Antifouling chemicals have a long history of causing toxicity to aquatic organisms. We measured growth and developmental timing in wood frog tadpoles exposed to the antifouling chemical medetomidine (10 nM-10 μM) starting at two different developmental stages in static renewal experiments. For tadpoles hatched from egg masses and exposed for 3 weeks to 100 nM and 1 μM, head width/total body length ratio was significantly shorter compared to control. For field-collected tadpoles at Gosner stage 24-25 and expose… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…It is widely used (Wendt et al, 2016) even though its ecotoxicological effects are poorly understood. Recent studies on amphibians showed that tadpoles exposed to medetomidine experienced delayed metamorphosis (Barr et al, 2018;Fong et al, 2018). Medetomidine induces paleness in fish (Bellas et al, 2005;Hilvarsson et al, 2007;Lennquist et al, 2010), which may be due to altered thyroid function, as TH regulates fish pigmentation (McMenamin et al, 2014;Saunders et al, 2019;Salis et al, 2021).…”
Section: Antifouling Compoundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is widely used (Wendt et al, 2016) even though its ecotoxicological effects are poorly understood. Recent studies on amphibians showed that tadpoles exposed to medetomidine experienced delayed metamorphosis (Barr et al, 2018;Fong et al, 2018). Medetomidine induces paleness in fish (Bellas et al, 2005;Hilvarsson et al, 2007;Lennquist et al, 2010), which may be due to altered thyroid function, as TH regulates fish pigmentation (McMenamin et al, 2014;Saunders et al, 2019;Salis et al, 2021).…”
Section: Antifouling Compoundsmentioning
confidence: 99%