{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: First Record of Malformation in Seahorses Attributed to the Oil Spill off the Brazilian Coast in 2019. {Author}: Silveira RB;Santos Silva JR;da Silva RB;Dos Santos GAP; {Journal}: Environ Toxicol Chem {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jul 9 {Factor}: 4.218 {DOI}: 10.1002/etc.5932 {Abstract}: In 2019, there was an environmental catastrophe in Brazil, when more than 5000 tons of unknown origin crude oil invaded beaches and mangroves. Two years later, two monitoring areas were selected to study seahorses' offspring: Massangana River estuary (apparently healthy area) and Cocaia Island (affected area). Thirty-six reproductive events of Hippocampus reidi (Syngnathidae) couples from these two areas were monitored to analyze the offspring. At the apparently healthy area, no newborns with malformations were found. However, the offspring from Cocaia Island showed a mean of 19.73% (±5.23) malformations in newborns. It is argued that the toxic/teratogenic effects of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons have affected the population in two ways: directly through the induction of mutations in the germ cells of the species and through a drastic reduction of the population (bottleneck effect) whose density observed today recovered through consanguineous couplings, potentiating deleterious genotypes in the offspring. Environ Toxicol Chem 2024;00:1-9. © 2024 SETAC.