Imposex


Imposex is a disorder in sea snails caused by the toxic effects of certain marine pollutants. These pollutants cause female sea snails to develop male sex organs such as a penis and a vas deferens.

Imposex inducing substances

It was believed that the only inducer of imposex was tributyltin, which can be active in extremely low concentrations, but recent studies reported other substances as inducers, such as triphenyltin and ethanol. Tributyltin is an anti-fouling agent for boats which affects females of the species Nucella lapillus, Voluta ebraea, Olivancillaria vesica, Stramonita haemastoma and more than 200 other marine gastropods.

Abnormalities

In the dog whelk, the growth of a penis in imposex females gradually blocks the oviduct, although ovule production continues. An imposex female dog whelk passes through several stages of penis growth before it becomes unable to maintain a constant production of ovules. Later stages of imposex lead to sterility and the premature death of the females of reproductive age, which can adversely affect the entire population.

Biomonitoring

The imposex stages of female dog whelks and other molluscs are used in the United Kingdom and worldwide to monitor levels of tributyltin. The RPSI of females to males, and the VDSI are used to monitor levels of tributyltin in marine environments.
On September 29, 2007, the Halifax, Nova Scotia, newspaper The Chronicle Herald featured a story on female dog whelks on the shores of Halifax Harbour and other parts of Nova Scotia, where they live on the beach in the intertidal zone. The report stated that female dog whelks still grow penises even after a ban on tributyltin.