Harbours as unique environmental sites of multiple anthropogenic stressors on fish hormonal systems
Emma Gairin
(1)
,
Mélanie Dussenne
(2)
,
Manon Mercader
(1)
,
Cécile Berthe
(3, 4)
,
Mathieu Reynaud
(3, 1)
,
Marc Metian
(5)
,
Suzanne C Mills
(3, 4)
,
Philippe Lenfant
(6)
,
Laurence Besseau
(2)
,
Frédéric Bertucci
(7, 8)
,
David Lecchini
(3, 4)
1
OIST -
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University
2 BIOM - Biologie intégrative des organismes marins
3 CRIOBE - Centre de recherches insulaires et observatoire de l'environnement
4 LabEX CORAIL - Laboratoire d'Excellence CORAIL
5 IAEA-EL - International Atomic Energy Agency - Environment Laboratories Monaco
6 CEFREM - Centre de Formation et de Recherche sur les Environnements Méditérranéens
7 BOREA - Biologie des Organismes et Ecosystèmes Aquatiques
8 Université des Antilles (Pôle Guadeloupe)
2 BIOM - Biologie intégrative des organismes marins
3 CRIOBE - Centre de recherches insulaires et observatoire de l'environnement
4 LabEX CORAIL - Laboratoire d'Excellence CORAIL
5 IAEA-EL - International Atomic Energy Agency - Environment Laboratories Monaco
6 CEFREM - Centre de Formation et de Recherche sur les Environnements Méditérranéens
7 BOREA - Biologie des Organismes et Ecosystèmes Aquatiques
8 Université des Antilles (Pôle Guadeloupe)
Emma Gairin
- Fonction : Auteur
- PersonId : 808533
- ORCID : 0000-0001-6898-8084
Laurence Besseau
- Fonction : Auteur
- PersonId : 1197444
- IdHAL : laurence-besseau
- ORCID : 0000-0002-9617-8190
- IdRef : 184615356
Frédéric Bertucci
- Fonction : Auteur
- PersonId : 1209245
- ORCID : 0000-0002-2425-9362
- IdRef : 161524885
David Lecchini
- Fonction : Auteur
- PersonId : 1194331
- ORCID : 0000-0002-6347-1112
- IdRef : 191538345
Résumé
Fish development and acclimation to environmental conditions are strongly mediated by the hormonal endocrine system. In environments contaminated by anthropogenic stressors, hormonal pathway alterations can be detrimental for growth, survival, fitness, and at a larger scale for population maintenance. In the context of increasingly contaminated marine environments worldwide, numerous laboratory studies have confirmed the effect of one or a combination of pollutants on fish hormonal systems. However, this has not been confirmed in situ. In this review, we explore the body of knowledge related to the influence of anthropogenic stressors disrupting fish endocrine systems, recent advances (focusing on thyroid hormones and stress hormones such as cortisol), and potential research perspectives. Through this review, we highlight how harbours can be used as "in situ laboratories" given the variety of anthropogenic stressors (such as plastic, chemical, sound, light pollution, and invasive species) that can be simultaneously investigated in harbours over long periods of time.
Format du dépôt | Fichier |
---|---|
Type de dépôt | Article dans une revue |
Titre |
en
Harbours as unique environmental sites of multiple anthropogenic stressors on fish hormonal systems
|
Résumé |
en
Fish development and acclimation to environmental conditions are strongly mediated by the hormonal endocrine system. In environments contaminated by anthropogenic stressors, hormonal pathway alterations can be detrimental for growth, survival, fitness, and at a larger scale for population maintenance. In the context of increasingly contaminated marine environments worldwide, numerous laboratory studies have confirmed the effect of one or a combination of pollutants on fish hormonal systems. However, this has not been confirmed in situ. In this review, we explore the body of knowledge related to the influence of anthropogenic stressors disrupting fish endocrine systems, recent advances (focusing on thyroid hormones and stress hormones such as cortisol), and potential research perspectives. Through this review, we highlight how harbours can be used as "in situ laboratories" given the variety of anthropogenic stressors (such as plastic, chemical, sound, light pollution, and invasive species) that can be simultaneously investigated in harbours over long periods of time.
|
Auteur(s) |
Emma Gairin
1
, Mélanie Dussenne
2
, Manon Mercader
1
, Cécile Berthe
3, 4
, Mathieu Reynaud
3, 1
, Marc Metian
5
, Suzanne C Mills
3, 4
, Philippe Lenfant
6
, Laurence Besseau
2
, Frédéric Bertucci
7, 8
, David Lecchini
3, 4
1
OIST -
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University
( 569902 )
- 1919-1 Tancha, Onna-son, Kunigami-gun
Okinawa, Japan 904-0495
- Japon
2
BIOM -
Biologie intégrative des organismes marins
( 542002 )
- 1 avenue de Fontaulé 66650 Banyuls sur mer
- France
3
CRIOBE -
Centre de recherches insulaires et observatoire de l'environnement
( 107006 )
- BP 1013 Papetoiai 98729 PAPETOAI
- France
4
LabEX CORAIL -
Laboratoire d'Excellence CORAIL
( 209113 )
- 58 avenue Paul Alduy 66860 Perpignan CEDEX - Tél. : 04 30 19 23 32 - contact@labex-corail.fr
- France
5
IAEA-EL -
International Atomic Energy Agency - Environment Laboratories Monaco
( 1049911 )
- 4a, Quai Antoine 1er, MC- 98000, Principality of Monaco
- Monaco
6
CEFREM -
Centre de Formation et de Recherche sur les Environnements Méditérranéens
( 251578 )
- 52, Avenue Paul Alduy, 66860 Perpignan Cedex. France
- France
7
BOREA -
Biologie des Organismes et Ecosystèmes Aquatiques
( 542153 )
- Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle - 7, rue Cuvier - CP 32 - 75231 Paris Cedex 05
- France
8
Université des Antilles (Pôle Guadeloupe)
( 466883 )
- Fouillole - BP 250 - 97157 Pointe à Pitre, Guadeloupe
- Guadeloupe
|
Langue du document |
Anglais
|
Nom de la revue |
|
Date de publication |
2022-09
|
Volume |
555
|
Page/Identifiant |
111727
|
Vulgarisation |
Non
|
Comité de lecture |
Oui
|
Audience |
Internationale
|
Domaine(s) |
|
Projet(s) ANR |
|
Mots-clés |
en
Fish, Harbours, Hormones, Anthropogenic stressors, Pollution, Plastics, ALAN, fish harbours hormones anthropogenic stressors pollution plastics ALAN, fish, harbours, hormones, anthropogenic stressors, pollution, plastics
|
DOI | 10.1016/j.mce.2022.111727 |
Origine :
Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s)
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