Lobster Dieoffs Linked to Chemicals in Plastics

New research shows that chemicals found in plastics and detergents can exacerbate lobster diseases.

<p>Hans Laufer.</p>
Hans Laufer, professor of molecular and cell biology, works with lobsters in his lab. Photo by Peg Van Patten

Lobsters in Long Island Sound have suffered intense dieoffs in the past decade, and a peculiar affliction, known as “shell disease,” has been a major contributor. Now, a molecular biologist at the University of Connecticut has discovered that waterborne chemicals, leached from plastics and detergents, may contribute to the disease in lobsters in the Sound.

Hans Laufer, a research professor in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has found that by interfering with hormones crucial to young lobster growth, chemicals such as bisphenol A can slow the lobsters’ molting patterns and interfere with regular development, leading to body deformations, susceptibility to disease, and potential death.

Laufer will join researchers from 15 other New England institutions this week to present the results of a three-year, $3 million research initiative at the 9th Annual Ronald C. Baird Sea Grant Science Symposium, taking place at the University of Rhode Island. The New England Lobster Research Initiative examined the causes of lobster shell disease and the contributing factors that make lobsters vulnerable to the disease.

<p>Lobster showing characteristics of shell disease. Photo courtesy of Rhode Island Sea Grant</p>
A lobster showing symptoms of shell disease. Photo courtesy of Rhode Island Sea Grant

Lobster shell disease has been a contentious issue in Connecticut since the beginning of a massive lobster die-off in Long Island Sound in the late 1990s. In the past decade, the state’s commercial lobster catch has plummeted, with catches falling to about one-sixth of their 1998 levels. Factors such as mosquito insecticides and warming temperatures have been implicated as potential risk factors for the disease, which creates dark lesions on the outside of the lobsters’ shells that, over time, bore through the shell to the membranes underneath.

The new research Laufer is presenting at the conference showed that chemicals found in plastic bottles and detergents may make lobsters more susceptible to the disease. He and his colleagues identified “hotspots” in the Sound where lobsters have high levels of alkylphenols – a group of chemicals derived from detergents, paints, and plastics – circulating in their bodies. The lobsters take in these chemicals from their food, mostly mollusks such as clams and mussels that filter the chemicals from the water. In the western Long Island Sound, the southern shore of Massachusetts, and Cape Cod Bay, as many as half of the lobsters surveyed were contaminated with the chemicals.

In the laboratory, Laufer has also shown that moderate levels of chemicals can double the amount of time it takes for a lobster to molt its shell and to create a hardened new shell. During this time, the lobsters’ thin skin is more vulnerable to pathogens, such as the bacteria that cause shell disease. By increasing the length of this vulnerable period, the ocean-borne chemicals effectively increase the chances that a lobster will get sick.

<p>A diseased lobster.</p>
A diseased lobster larva. Photo by Hans Laufer

Laufer says these effects likely occur because the chemicals can mimic certain lobster hormones.

“Alkylphenols have phenomenal juvenile hormone activity,” he says. “Juvenile hormone controls things like growth, reproduction, metamorphosis, and development.”

Lobster larvae with moderate levels of alkylphenols in their blood retain juvenile characteristics, he says, such as spiny tails and short antennae. This makes them less likely to survive in the wild.

<p>Hans Laufer.</p>
Hans Laufer displays lobsters from Long Island Sound. Photo by Peg Van Patten

To make matters worse, lobsters have also been observed to molt their shells more often when afflicted with shell disease. Molting is the only effective way for lobsters to temporarily rid themselves of the disease, but mother lobsters afflicted by the disease have been observed to molt even when carrying eggs on the undersides of their shells, and this effectively kills their unborn offspring.

Chemicals like alkylphenols are washed into waterways mainly from landfill and water treatment facilities, and eventually find their way to the ocean. Of the about 1 million tons of BPA produced annually, 60 percent of it ends up in the ocean.

Laufer says that the only way to reduce the chemicals’ impact on living things is to reduce our use of plastics.

“Plastics are everywhere, but plastic recycling is easy,” he says. “We need to reuse plastics instead of throwing them away, and increase our use of plastic substitutes, like cardboard and glass bottles.”

Aside from being a concern for the fisheries industry, Laufer also thinks that alkylphenol contamination is a serious threat to human health. About 90 percent of the U.S. population are also contaminated with alkylphenols, which in some cases – such as BPA – have been shown to affect human reproduction. The effects of many other alkylphenols remain largely unknown, but he suspects that if they are hazardous to lobsters, they’re probably hazardous to humans, too.

“This is as big a threat to human health as tobacco,” Laufer says. “Many companies are saying that they’re safe, but they’re not.”