Salmon exposed to cocaine are more "adventurous" study finds

"Long after the high is gone, illegal drugs linger in the environment. Cocaine and its breakdown products, for example, are found in rivers and lakes worldwide. And like children living with secondhand smoke, wildlife in polluted waters—including tiny crustaceans, fish, and even sharks—can’t help but take up these drugs."

"To mimic the effect of living in polluted water, the researchers surgically implanted small devices into 2-year-old Atlantic salmon from a hatchery that slowly release chemicals at a dose equivalent to what fish would experience in water with relatively high amounts of drugs."

"One group of 35 fish received implants containing cocaine. Another group got implants with benzoylecgonine, the main breakdown product of cocaine and often found in water bodies in greater amounts. The third group received control implants with no chemicals. All the fish were outfitted with small tags so the research team, led by behavioral ecologists Jack Brand and Michael Bertram of the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, could track their movements over 2 months in Lake Vättern."

"In general, young hatchery salmon tend to explore more after they are released. As they learn about their new environment, they move around less and less. This is what the researchers observed over the 2 months—with a twist. The salmon with drug implants retained more of their adventuresome spirit. Compared with the controls, fish exposed to the metabolite benzoylecgonine swam as much as 1.9 times farther each week."

Link: https://www.science.org/content/article/cocaine-pollution-gives-salmon-wanderlust

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