The Borneo Post

Herbicide a boost for tadpoles a study reveals

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PARIS: Maligned as a bee-killer and possibly cancer- causing, a common herbicide has turned out to be a boon for tadpoles making them more toxic to predators, researcher­s said last Wednesday.

Common toad larvae exposed to glyphosate, used in the wellknown herbicide Roundup, contained higher doses of bufadienol­ides – life- saving natural chemicals found in some plants and animals.

Bufadienol­ides taste bad to put off potential tadpole diners, and can kill in large quantities.

“That environmen­tal pollution can induce changes in bufadienol­ide production is relevant not only for toads but also for their predators,” said study co-author Veronika Bokony of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

While some toad species are declining, she pointed out, others such as the Australian cane toad are invading new areas and disturbing establishe­d ecosystems.

“Thus, if some pesticides make toads more poisonous, this might alter predatory-prey dynamics and the structure of natural communitie­s in freshwater habitats,” Bokony told AFP.

Toads with more bufadienol­ides in their bodies are more toxic. Large Australian predators like crocodiles, for example, die from eating cane toads which are a large species and therefore contain more toxins.

For the experiment, Bokony and a team raised common toad larvae in water polluted with a glyphosate-based herbicide, and noted that the amount of bufadienol­ides in their tiny bodies were elevated.

“So these tadpoles became a more ‘ concentrat­ed’ source of bufadienol­ides compared to their siblings that were raised in clean water,” said Bokony.

Glyphosate­s are widely used in agricultur­e, and pollute freshwater bodies that receive runoff from farms.

The European Union will decide in December whether to renew the licence for glyphosate, which is produced by US agrochemic­als giant Monsanto.

Last year, Europe limited use of the herbicide for research, over fears that it causes cancer.

The EU’s chemical agency said glyphosate should be not be classified as cancer- causing.

But this is challenged by scientists and environmen­talists who point to a finding by the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer that glyphosate is “probably carcinogen­ic”. The study was published in Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

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