The effects of embryonic exposure to androgen disrupting chemicals (ADCs) on growth and fluctuating asymmetry (FA) were determined in Japanese quail chicks. Embryos were exposed to an anti-androgenic chemical, 1,1,1-Trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (p,p'-DDE) at 20 or 40 microg, or to an androgenic chemical, trenbolone acetate, at 5 or 50 microg on day one of incubation. Growth was measured by body weight and tarsus and culmen lengths from day of hatch until day 29. FA was measured as differences in right versus left lengths of the tarsus, radius, zygomatic process, and premaxilla in day old carcasses. No differences in FA were observed for either treatment. Embryonic exposure to DDE resulted in no significant differences in all measures of growth, although the same quail exhibited significant differences in immunological, reproductive, and behavioral measurements (reported elsewhere). Chicks exposed to trenbolone exhibited no differences in body weight or measures of FA at day of hatch, however, subsequent growth was inhibited. This study shows that although growth and FA are often used as measures of chemical stress experienced during embryonic development, they are not sensitive measures for exposure to these ADCs at these levels in Japanese quail.
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