“…At sublethal doses, BPA has been shown to delay larval development in copepods and molluscs, to induce changes in immune digestive gland function in marine bivalves, or to stimulate metamorphosis and larval development in marine polychaetes and copepods (Canesi & Fabbri, ), with effective concentrations ranging from 0.01 up to 300 µg/µl (Flint et al, ). Furthermore, BPA and other known vertebrate EDCs, such as diuron and diethylstilbestrol specifically affect neurodevelopment in ascidians at low doses, as recently reported (Dumollard, Gazo, Gomes, Besnardeau, & McDougall, ; Messinetti, Mercurio, & Pennati, ; Messinetti, Mercurio, & Pennati, ). However, apart from the phenotypes and dose‐response sensitivity, few studies assessed the mode‐of‐action and even fewer addressed the potential involvement of NRs in the teratogenic effects of EDCs in marine invertebrates.…”