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Study: Prescription drugs affecting wild fish


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By Amina Khan, Los Angeles Times

A common psychiatric drug may be affecting the feeding behavior of wild fish as it filters out of our bodies, through our toilets and into treated wastewater that is released into natural water sources, according to a new study in the journal Science.

The findings, which examined the effect of trace levels of the anti-anxiety medication oxazepam on wild European perch, have implications for the survival rates of fish and the way in which human pharmaceuticals may affect the delicate food web in aquatic ecosystems.

Scientists have known for years that such “micropollutants” end up in natural waterways like streams and rivers after being flushed through human systems into wastewater. But current research hasn’t really looked at whether psychotherapeutic drugs can affect the behavior of aquatic creatures, the authors noted – which is surprising, because a common class of anti-anxiety medications known as benzodiazepines works by binding to receptors that are found in a wide range of animals.

To test one such drug’s effect, the researchers took fish that were hatched in the wild and exposed them to either low concentrations of oxazepam (1.8 micrograms per liter) or high concentrations of the drug (910 micrograms per liter) for seven days.

These “personality changes” clearly had an effect on feeding behavior as well — fish on oxazepam ate more zooplankton and did so faster than their peers, quickly depleting the food source. In the short term, this might sound like an evolutionary advantage for the perch – but the increased boldness also means they may be taking riskier behaviors, making them more vulnerable to predators.

And regardless, eating all that zooplankton may allow the zooplankton’s food source, algae, to run unchecked, resulting in algal blooms that suck the oxygen out of the ocean and create dead zones devoid of aquatic life.

The researchers’ findings could well reflect reality in waters worldwide: Their low concentrations in the lab were roughly equivalent to levels found in wild fish in the River Fyris in Sweden. And they found that the fish’s muscle tissue held more than six times that amount, evidence that the drug was building up over time.

The study may require humans to rethink the idea of pollutants, lead author Tomas Brodin, a researcher at Umea University in Sweden, said at a news conference Thursday at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Boston.

“It’s a global issue,” Brodin said. “We find these concentrations all over the world – and it’s quite possible, even probable, that these behavioral effects are actually happening as we speak.”

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Comments (6)
  1. Careaboutthecommunity says - Posted: February 20, 2013

    Just say “no” little fishes!

  2. Jennifer says - Posted: February 21, 2013

    If the drugs stay inside the fish and build up over time, we are ingesting the drugs as well when we eat the fish.
    Drugs are over-prescribed. Unfortunately, people dispose of them in the toilet. The occasional drug drop-off programs at pharmacies should be available for people year round, and pharmacists should emphasize the importance of disposing leftover drugs in that manner. Keep them out of the environment.

  3. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: February 21, 2013

    Drugs in fish?
    Okay Mr. fish, pee in the cup. I agree with Jennifer that there are far too many drugs being way over-prescribed and its been a real big problem for years.

    Don’t flush your unused medications down the toilet. STPUD does a great job of cleaning our waste water and pumping it down to Indian Creek Resevoir. Are those fish tainted with drugs? I don’t know.

    Remove the unused medication from and bottle and mix them in with your kitchen garbage. They will dissolve and end up in the landfill.

    Maybe this explains why the cottontails were nibbeling in my garden last year. They broke into one of the grow houses around here, ate some pot, got the munchies and then came to my place to stuff themselves with my lettuce and radishes.
    Take Care, Old Long Skiis

  4. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: February 22, 2013

    MTT,
    Yes, I’ve seen a large gold fish in the keys. I was tyin’ the boat up to the dock and this large orange fish that looked like a Koi came to the surface to eat a bug.
    I know there are lots of non-native fish in the lake but that one really caught me by surprize.OLS