From Deseret News archives:

Water worries: Fish, wildlife are showing ill effects from drugs

Published: Tuesday, March 11, 2008 12:32 a.m. MDT
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• That research follows a 2003 study in northern Texas, where every bluegill, black crappie and channel catfish researchers caught living downstream of a wastewater treatment plant tested positive for the active ingredients in two widely used antidepressants — one of the first times the residues of such drugs were detected in wildlife.

• In several recent studies of soil fertilized with livestock manure or with the sludge product from wastewater treatment plants, American scientists found earthworms had accumulated those same compounds, while vegetables — including corn, lettuce and potatoes — had absorbed antibiotics. "These results raise potential human health concerns," wrote researchers.

• Blood and liver samples of bull sharks in Florida's Caloosahatchee River, a nursery area for juvenile bull sharks and home to six wastewater treatment plants, are being tested for the presence of an array of medications this winter. Of the first ten sharks sampled, nine tested positive for the active ingredient in an antidepressant.

• And in Colorado's Boulder Creek, 50 of the 60 white suckers collected downstream of Boulder's wastewater treatment plant were female, compared to about half of them upstream.

Story continues below
Elsewhere in the world — from the icy streams of England to the wild game reserves of South Africa — snails, fish, even antelope, are showing signs of possible pharmaceutical contamination. For example, fish and prawns in China exposed to treated wastewater had shortened life spans, Pacific oysters off the coast of Singapore had inhibited growth, and in Norway, Atlantic salmon exposed to levels of estrogen similar to those found in the North Sea had severe reproductive problems.

More than 100 different pharmaceuticals have been detected in surface waters throughout the world. "It's inescapable," said Sudeep Chandra, an assistant professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, who studies inland waters and aquatic life. "There's enough global information now to confirm these contaminants are affecting organisms and wildlife."

While some researchers have captured wildlife and tested it for pharmaceuticals, many more have brought wildlife into their laboratories and exposed them to traces of human pharmaceuticals at levels similar to those found in water, aquatic plants and animals.

The results have been troubling.

Freshwater mussels exposed to tiny amounts of an antidepressant's active ingredient released premature larvae, giving the next generation lower odds of survival; in a separate lab study, the antidepressant also stunted reproduction in tiny fresh water mud snails.

Recent comments

I think this is kool... to avoid depression to fishing and for...

Jack Sorensen | March 13, 2008 at 10:49 p.m.

Where are all of the people who adamently refuse to belive that...

Kevin in Texas | March 11, 2008 at 8:01 p.m.

Thanks for this Story, albeit many years overdue. But, I also smell...

Lane Meyer | March 11, 2008 at 5:04 p.m.

Image

Larry Bowen shows a strand of membrane that along with hundreds of others placed together in a frame will act as a sewer filter for cleaning water.

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