11 results on '"Susan Jobling"'
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2. Reduction in the estrogenic activity of a treated sewage effluent discharge to an english river as a result of a decrease in the concentration of industrially derived surfactants
- Author
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Joe Kennedy, M. J. Waldock, Susan Jobling, Mark R. Hurst, David A. Sheahan, S.J Kirby, Mic Daniel, Edwin J. Routledge, Geoff Brighty, Jule E. Harries, John P. Sumpter, and Steven Morris
- Subjects
Alkylphenol ,biology ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Sewage ,biology.organism_classification ,Nonylphenol ,Gonadosomatic Index ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Trout ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental Chemistry ,Sewage treatment ,Water pollution ,business ,Effluent - Abstract
As a result of the introduction of tighter discharge limits and effluent treatment processes at source, the concentration of alkylphenol ethoxylates and nonylphenol present in the final effluent discharge from a sewage treatment works that treats trade effluent from the textiles industry was reduced. The estrogenic effects of the final effluent discharge to the Aire River were compared over a four-year period during which various treatment measures were introduced. Male rainbow trout exposed to the effluent on four occasions in consecutive years (1994โ1997) showed a reduction in the level of induced vitellogenesis between 1994 and 1997. A marked decrease in gonadosomatic index (GSI) and increase in heptaosomatic index (HSI) was measured in fish exposed to the effluent in 1994. In successive years, these differences diminished, and in the case of the GSI no measurable difference was observed between fish exposed to the final effluent or those in the control group in 1997. However, an increase in HSI was still measurable in 1997 in fish exposed to the final effluent and at sites farther downstream. The reduction in the effects of the effluent paralleled the reduction in the concentration of nonylphenol as well as its mono- and diethoxylates, which have been demonstrated to produce estrogenic effects in trout exposed to these compounds in the laboratory. This study demonstrates that the setting of more restricted discharge limits for known estrogenic chemicals of industrial origin can lead to significant reductions in the estrogenic activity of the watercourses into which the effluents are discharged.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Sexual disruption in a second species of wild cyprinid fish (the gudgeon,Gobio gobio) in United Kingdom Freshwaters
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Lisette B. Christiansen, Susan Jobling, Monique Nolan, Charles R. Tyler, Ronny van Aerle, and John P. Sumpter
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endocrine system ,River ecosystem ,Gonad ,Testicular tissue ,urogenital system ,Ecology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Gobio gobio ,Vitellogenin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Weir ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Environmental Chemistry ,%22">Fish ,Rutilus - Abstract
To establish whether the intersex condition seen in the roach (Rutilus rutilus) in United Kingdom (UK) rivers was species specific or a more general phenomenon in fish, evidence for sexual disruption was sought in a second cyprinid species, the gudgeon (Gobio gobio). Gudgeon were collected from the Rivers Aire and Lea (at locations that receive high-volume discharges of sewage treatment works [STW] effluent and that contain intersex roach) and from two still waters, and their gonads were examined histologically for evidence of intersexuality (the simultaneous presence of oocytes and testicular tissue). Intersex gonads were found at all sites, with the highest incidences occurring at one of the still waters (Lakeside Fisheries: 15%) and at sites on the River Aire (Thwaite Weir, Silsden Bridge, and Knostrop: 14, 13, and 12%, respectively). In the River Lea and Longton Park Lake, the incidence of intersexuality in gudgeon was 6%. In most cases, intersex gonads were characterized by a few primary oocytes/gonad section in an otherwise normal testis. However, at some sites on the River Aire (Thwaite Weir and Knostrop), the intersex condition was more severe. At Thwaite Weir, for example, more than half of the gonad in 40% of the intersex fish was comprised of ovarian tissue. Elevated concentrations of plasma vitellogenin both in male and in intersex fish indicated that fish had been exposed to estrogen(s). Some of the gudgeon were found at sites several kilometers downstream of any point discharge of STW effluent; therefore, the results likely are representative of this species in wild populations found in typical UK river ecosystems. Together with the findings in the roach, these data on the gudgeon confirm that sexual disruption in fish in UK rivers is not species specific.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Estrogenic potency of effluent from two sewage treatment works in the United Kingdom
- Author
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Susan Jobling, Jule E. Harries, Afsaneh Janbakhsh, Peter Matthiessen, John P. Sumpter, and Charles R. Tyler
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animal structures ,business.industry ,Ecology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Sewage ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Vitellogenin ,Animal science ,Toxicity ,biology.protein ,Environmental Chemistry ,Sewage treatment ,Rainbow trout ,business ,Effluent ,Sludge ,Salmonidae - Abstract
Rainbow trout were exposed for 3 weeks (in a flow-through system) to various dilutions of treated effluent (25, 50, 75, and 100%) from Harpenden and Chelmsford sewage treatment works (STW) during November 1994 and August 1996, respectively, and the induction of plasma vitellogenin was measured. Significant (p < 0.05) increases in plasma vitellogenin concentrations occurred in fish held in effluent from Harpenden STW at concentrations of 50% and above. At Chelmsford STW, the effluent appeared to be more potent, causing induction of vitellogenin in fish at concentrations as low as 25% (compared with 50% for the Harpenden effluent). Exposure to lower concentrations of effluent emanating from Chelmsford in April of the following year indicated that estrogenic activity was diluted to no-effect levels at this STW at concentrations between 12 and 25%.
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- 1999
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5. Estrogenic activity in five United Kingdom rivers detected by measurement of vitellogenesis in caged male trout
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Susan Jobling, Peter Matthiessen, David A. Sheahan, Nicholas Zaman, John P. Sumpter, Tina Tylor, Paula Neall, and Jule E. Harries
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biology ,business.industry ,Ecology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Sewage ,biology.organism_classification ,Trout ,Vitellogenin ,Environmental chemistry ,biology.protein ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Rainbow trout ,Vitellogenesis ,Water pollution ,business ,Effluent ,Salmonidae - Abstract
It was recently demonstrated that most, if not all, effluents of sewage-treatment works (STWs) in the United Kingdom are estrogenic to fish. As many STWs discharge into rivers, it is possible that some stretches of rivers downstream of where the effluent enters might also be estrogenic. To assess this possibility, the induction of vitellogenin synthesis in caged male trout placed at various distances downstream of the effluent entry point was used as a biomarker of estrogen exposure. Individual discharges into five rivers in England were studied. In four cases, fish placed in the neat effluent, or close to where it entered a river, showed very marked and rapid increases in their plasma vitellogenin concentrations, demonstrating that the effluent was estrogenic. In two of these four cases, none of the downstream sites were estrogenic, whereas in one of the four, fish placed at a site 1.5 km downstream did respond by synthesizing appreciable amounts of vitellogenin, although sites further downstream were not estrogenic. The situation in the fourth river was quite different; not only was the effluent extremely estrogenic (a maximum vitellogenin response in the mg/ml range was attained), but so were all the other study sites on the river, the last of which was 5 km downstream of where the effluent entered. This particular river receives trade effluent from wool-scouring mills, which contains much higher concentrations of alkylphenolic chemicals than any of the other discharges studied. It is suggested that these chemicals probably account for the estrogenic activity of this river. The final (fifth) river showed no estrogenic activity, not even in the neat effluent. This discharge comes from a very small STW, which receives no trade waste, and one or both of these factors may account for why the effluent (and hence the river) was not estrogenic.
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- 1997
- Full Text
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6. A survey of estrogenic activity in United Kingdom inland waters
- Author
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David A. Sheahan, Jule E. Harries, Susan Jobling, John P. Sumpter, Edwin J. Routledge, Richard Rycroft, Peter Matthiessen, Tina Tylor, and Paula Neall
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endocrine system ,animal structures ,biology ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Outfall ,Sewage ,biology.organism_classification ,Vitellogenin ,Trout ,Animal science ,biology.protein ,Environmental Chemistry ,Rainbow trout ,Water quality ,business ,Effluent ,Salmonidae - Abstract
Vitellogenin, a yolk-precursor protein normally found only in the blood plasma of sexually mature female teleosts and other egg-laying vertebrates, was used as an indicator of exposure of male rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to exogenous estrogens. Vitellogenin concentrations were measured using a specific radioimmunoassay for trout. Cages containing adult male trout were placed at the points of discharge and at varying distances downstream of treated sewage effluent outfalls into the River Lea (UK) during the summer and winter months of 1992. After 3 weeks exposure at the majority of sites, fish held up to 15 km downstream of inputs showed an increase in plasma vitellogenin concentration, with statistically significant elevations up to 4.5 km downstream. A repeat survey in November 1992 below Harpenden sewage treatment works showed that the only two stations to give a significant response were 3 m and 1.6 km downstream of the outfall. This reduced effect compared to the first survey is thought to be due to dilution of both the influent sewage to the treatment works and of the river water itself by increased rainfall, the overall increase in dilution being approx. 36%. Trout were also placed in 15 raw water storage reservoirs in southeast England during the summer of 1993 for an exposure period of 6 weeks. No biologically significant increases in plasma vitellogenin concentration were observed in any of the reservoirs.
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- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Inhibition of testicular growth in rainbow trout(Oncorhynchus mykiss)exposed to estrogenic alkylphenolic chemicals
- Author
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Julia A. Osborne, Susan Jobling, David A. Sheahan, Peter Matthiessen, and John P. Sumpter
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Pollutant ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Alkylphenol ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,biology.organism_classification ,Nonylphenol ,Vitellogenin ,Trout ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Environmental chemistry ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecotoxicology ,Rainbow trout ,Salmonidae - Abstract
It is becoming evident that an increasing number of widely used industrial and agricultural chemicals are estrogenic. The biodegradation products of a major group of nonionic surfactants, the alkylphenol polyethoxylates, are one such group. Some of these chemicals are widespread aquatic pollutants, and bioconcentrate in aquatic biota. Exposure of male rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to four different alkylphenolic chemicals caused synthesis of vitellogenin, a process normally dependent on endogenous estrogens, and a concomitant inhibition of testicular growth. The magnitude of these estrogenic effects was dependent on the estrogenic potency of the chemical, the stage of reproductive development of the fish, and the concentration of the chemical in the water. These results support the contention that exposure of wildlife to environmentally persistent estrogenic chemicals can result in deleterious reproductive consequences.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Estrogenic activity of tropical fish food can alter baseline vitellogenin concentrations in male fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas)
- Author
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Tamsin J. Runnalls, John P. Sumpter, Susan Jobling, Jayne V. Brian, and Nicola Beresford
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Male ,Pimephales promelas ,biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,ESTROGENIC SUBSTANCES ,Cyprinidae ,Fish diet ,Zoology ,Estrogens ,Vitellogenin ,Minnow ,Animal Feed ,Fathead minnow ,Toxicology ,Vitellogenins ,biology.animal ,Estrogenic food ,biology.protein ,Environmental Chemistry ,Animals ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Tropical fish - Abstract
The official published version can be obtained at the link below - copyright @ 2011 John Wiley and Sons Vitellogenin (VTG) is a precursor of egg-yolk protein and is therefore present at high concentrations in the plasma of female fish. In male fish, VTG concentrations are usually undetectable or low but can be induced upon exposure to estrogenic substances either via the water or the diet. This work was performed to determine the reason for the apparently elevated VTG concentrations in unexposed stock male fathead minnow maintained in our laboratory. The results showed clearly that some Of the food given to the fish was estrogenic and that replacement of this with nonestrogenic food led to a significant reduction in the basal VTG levels measured in male fish after a six-month period. This reduction in male VTG concentrations drastically increased the sensitivity of the VTG test in further studies carried out with these fish. Moreover, a review of published concentrations of VTG in unexposed male fathead minnow suggests that this problem may exist in other laboratories. The fathead minnow is a standard ecotoxicological fish test species, so these findings will be of interest to any laboratory carrying out fish tests on endocrine-disrupting chemicals.
- Published
- 2010
9. Reduction in the estrogenic activity of a treated sewage effluent discharge to an English river as a result of a decrease in the concentration of industrially derived surfactants
- Author
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David A, Sheahan, Geoff C, Brighty, Mic, Daniel, Susan, Jobling, Jule E, Harries, Mark R, Hurst, Joe, Kennedy, Sonia J, Kirby, Steven, Morris, Edwin J, Routledge, John P, Sumpter, and Michael J, Waldock
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Male ,Surface-Active Agents ,Vitellogenins ,Phenols ,Sewage ,Oncorhynchus mykiss ,Textile Industry ,Water Pollution ,Animals ,Biological Assay ,Estrogens ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Water Pollutants, Chemical - Abstract
As a result of the introduction of tighter discharge limits and effluent treatment processes at source, the concentration of alkylphenol ethoxylates and nonylphenol present in the final effluent discharge from a sewage treatment works that treats trade effluent from the textiles industry was reduced. The estrogenic effects of the final effluent discharge to the Aire River were compared over a four-year period during which various treatment measures were introduced. Male rainbow trout exposed to the effluent on four occasions in consecutive years (1994-1997) showed a reduction in the level of induced vitellogenesis between 1994 and 1997. A marked decrease in gonadosomatic index (GSI) and increase in heptaosomatic index (HSI) was measured in fish exposed to the effluent in 1994. In successive years, these differences diminished, and in the case of the GSI no measurable difference was observed between fish exposed to the final effluent or those in the control group in 1997. However, an increase in HSI was still measurable in 1997 in fish exposed to the final effluent and at sites farther downstream. The reduction in the effects of the effluent paralleled the reduction in the concentration of nonylphenol as well as its mono- and diethoxylates, which have been demonstrated to produce estrogenic effects in trout exposed to these compounds in the laboratory. This study demonstrates that the setting of more restricted discharge limits for known estrogenic chemicals of industrial origin can lead to significant reductions in the estrogenic activity of the watercourses into which the effluents are discharged.
- Published
- 2002
10. SEXUAL DISRUPTION IN A SECOND SPECIES OF WILD CYPRINID FISH (THE GUDGEON, GOBIO GOBIO) IN UNITED KINGDOM FRESHWATERS
- Author
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Ronny van Aerle, Monique Nolan, Susan Jobling, Lisette B. Christiansen, John P. Sumpter, and Charles R. Tyler
- Subjects
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Environmental Chemistry - Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. INHIBITION OF TESTICULAR GROWTH IN RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) EXPOSED TO ESTROGENIC ALKYLPHENOLIC CHEMICALS
- Author
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Susan Jobling, David Sheahan, Julia A. Osborne, Peter Matthiessen, and John P. Sumpter
- Subjects
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Environmental Chemistry - Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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