NI Global Issues for Learners of English > Issues > Pesticides > Endocrine Disruptors - Facts | Interview
What are endocrine disruptors? |
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Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that cause birth defects, sexual abnormalities, and failure to reproduce properly. The endocrine glands are important organs in the body, including the testes, the ovaries, the pancreas and the thyroid. These organs make hormones (chemical "messengers") that go through the bloodstream. Endocrine disruptors interfere with these hormones. They can do this in two ways:
Dioxin is a well-known example of an endocrine disruptor. |
DISRUPT (v) to make something
not work properly: An endocrine DISRUPTOR makes the endocrine system not
work properly.
DEFECT: (n) a fault, something that is not right ABNORMALITY: the noun from abnormal = not normal; an abnormality is something that is not as it should be. REPRODUCE: to create young by making babies or eggs & so on. The TESTES are the male organs that make sperm as well as male hormones. The OVARIES are the female organs that make eggs as well as female hormones. The PANCREAS produces insulin as well as some products that help digestion. The THYROID produces substances that affect how you develop and behave. |
This material was adapted from the article, Crossed bills and broken eggs in the May 2000 issue of the New Internationalist. .
© 2000: the New Internationalist
NI Global Issues for Learners of English > Issues > Pesticides > Endocrine Disruptors - Facts | Interview
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Last Modified: 12 July 2000