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Anti Federalist
07-24-2010, 12:11 PM
Prozac Pollution Making Shrimp Reckless

Kate Ravilious

for National Geographic News

Published July 16, 2010

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/07/100715-shrimp-prozac-antidepressants-environment-science/

There's no happy ending for shrimp exposed to the mood-booster Prozac, according to a new study.

Remnants of antidepressant drugs flushed into waterways worldwide are altering shrimp behavior and making them easier prey, experts say.

(See "Cocaine, Spices, Hormones Found in Drinking Water.")

To mimic conditions in the wild, scientists exposed the estuary-dwelling shrimp Echinogammarus marinus to the antidepressant fluoxetine at levels detected in average sewage-treatment waste. Fluoxetine is the key ingredient in the drugs Prozac and Sarafem.

Shrimp normally gravitate toward safe, dark corners. But when exposed to fluoxetine, the animals were five times more likely to swim toward a bright region of water, the team discovered.

"This behavior makes them much more likely to be eaten by a predator, such as a fish or bird," said study co-author Alex Ford, a biologist at U.K.'s University of Portsmouth.

The fluoxetine likely makes shrimp's nerves more sensitive to serotonin, a brain chemical known to alter moods and sleep patterns, according to the study, recently published in the journal Aquatic Toxicology.

Prozac Rise May Harm Other Animals

Antidepressant use is rising rapidly—more than 10 percent of U.S. citizens, or about 27 million people, used the drugs in 2005, according to a 2009 paper in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry.

(Related: "Is Salt Nature's Antidepressant?")

It's so widespread that animals other than shrimp likely suffer from these high doses of fluoxetine, the authors noted. (Get the facts on freshwater threats.)

"We focused on shrimp because they are common and important in the food chain, but serotonin is also linked to behavioral changes in other species, including fish," Ford said.

(Read about chemicals changing male fish to female in a U.S. river.)

Ford believes that many other common prescription drugs—such as antiinflammatory drugs and painkillers—could also be causing problems for aquatic life.

But there are ways of protecting aquatic creatures from the drugs we take, Ford noted.

For instance, more public awareness about responsible drug disposal and better technology for breaking down pharmaceuticals at sewage works, among other solutions, could help to solve the problem, he said.

Zippyjuan
07-24-2010, 01:07 PM
There are lots of drugs in our water supply. You don't have to "improperly dispose" of them either. Molecules can pass thorugh the body and be eleminated via the urine and purification does not remove them. The farther down the water chain you are (your waste is cleaned and passed downstream to the next users, etc) the more in the supply. Hear that New Orleans and San Diego?

Anti Federalist
07-24-2010, 02:46 PM
There are lots of drugs in our water supply. You don't have to "improperly dispose" of them either. Molecules can pass thorugh the body and be eleminated via the urine and purification does not remove them. The farther down the water chain you are (your waste is cleaned and passed downstream to the next users, etc) the more in the supply. Hear that New Orleans and San Diego?

Way too many.

And you are right, most of it comes from human waste and not "improper disposal".

torchbearer
07-24-2010, 03:16 PM
how much prozac is in your water supply?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/12/health-care-facilities-fl_n_420295.html

Dr.3D
07-24-2010, 03:22 PM
I've read articles about birth control pills doing the same thing. Seems men are losing sperm count because of the reprocessed water supply containing the hormones excreted by women who have been taking them. They reported that most of those hormones pass right through the body and into the water supply. The report claimed men have had a 50% drop in sperm count in the past 50 years. Sort of makes me wonder if in the next 50 years, will men only have 25% of the sperm they had 100 years before?

If this keeps up, is the human race going to become extinct?

GunnyFreedom
07-24-2010, 04:25 PM
how much prozac is in your water supply?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/12/health-care-facilities-fl_n_420295.html (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/12/health-care-facilities-fl_n_420295.html)

z e r o :D

You couldn't pay me to hook into a municipal water supply for any reason. For home use I have a deepwell and for coffee and cooking I use distilled water.

torchbearer
07-24-2010, 04:50 PM
z e r o :D

You couldn't pay me to hook into a municipal water supply for any reason. For home use I have a deepwell and for coffee and cooking I use distilled water.

yeah, we have our own water wells on the farm. 1000ft wells. one is used for the pond.
all my folks need are so solar panels and they could be 100% off the grid.

Anti Federalist
07-24-2010, 10:45 PM
yeah, we have our own water wells on the farm. 1000ft wells. one is used for the pond.
all my folks need are so solar panels and they could be 100% off the grid.

Any H2S from those deep wells?

Mine is 585' and has perfect water, granite overcrop and limestone.

But some deep wells can suffer from a lot of H2S.

specsaregood
07-24-2010, 11:00 PM
//

Acala
07-25-2010, 05:52 AM
Even well water may not be safe. It depends on how the aquifer is recharged. If it is recharged by surface water (rivers and lakes) that are polluted, it will eventually become polluted. And pollution migrates through aquifers. In some areas in the arid southwest (where I live) the aquifer is being recharged with surface water of low quality and with reclaimed sewage with all the pass-through pharmaceuticals intact. Bad news.:eek:

I really need to start drinking my rain water.

Cowlesy
07-25-2010, 06:13 AM
That is one of the very few snooty liberal things I do in nyc, is I have all my drinking water delivered by Poland Spring.

(waits for someone to dig out some article about how Poland Spring water causes cancer or something).

Acala
07-25-2010, 08:33 AM
That is one of the very few snooty liberal things I do in nyc, is I have all my drinking water delivered by Poland Spring.

(waits for someone to dig out some article about how Poland Spring water causes cancer or something).

Doesn't cause cancer. It causes you to be a helpless pawn in the hegemonic aspirations and conflicts of your neighbors.

Anti Federalist
07-25-2010, 11:28 AM
That is one of the very few snooty liberal things I do in nyc, is I have all my drinking water delivered by Poland Spring.

(waits for someone to dig out some article about how Poland Spring water causes cancer or something).

That made me LoL.


Doesn't cause cancer. It causes you to be a helpless pawn in the hegemonic aspirations and conflicts of your neighbors.

That made me LoL even harder.

"Ron Paul Drinks Fiji Water"

:D

Cowlesy
07-25-2010, 11:32 AM
"Reckless shrimp" also makes me think of the little creatures getting tanked off the hooch and having little shrimp brawls on the ocean floor, head-butting and tail-smacking.

torchbearer
07-25-2010, 11:08 PM
Any H2S from those deep wells?

Mine is 585' and has perfect water, granite overcrop and limestone.

But some deep wells can suffer from a lot of H2S.

no H2S, no sulfur. it does have a lot of flouride. but i've never had any teeth problems and i don't have to maintain them to stay that way.
they are reinforced, severely.

specialK
08-03-2010, 06:55 PM
I've read articles about birth control pills doing the same thing. Seems men are losing sperm count because of the reprocessed water supply containing the hormones excreted by women who have been taking them. They reported that most of those hormones pass right through the body and into the water supply. The report claimed men have had a 50% drop in sperm count in the past 50 years. Sort of makes me wonder if in the next 50 years, will men only have 25% of the sperm they had 100 years before?

If this keeps up, is the human race going to become extinct?

They don't call them "birth control" pills for nuthin'.