Frogs, fish and pharmaceuticals a troubling brew
Prozac, other drugs detected in streams and their inhabitants
(CNN) -- A number of aquatic and amphibian species are being exposed to small amounts of everything from Prozac to perfume to birth control pills that make their way into U.S. rivers and streams.
And scientists now have evidence that this "cocktail" of pharmaceuticals, in high enough quantities, can lead to problems that may be serious enough to prevent wildlife from reproducing. It's not yet clear how the buildup over time could affect the species.
In 2002, 80 percent of streams sampled by the U.S. Geological Survey showed evidence of drugs, hormones, steroids and personal care products such as soaps and perfumes. The U.S.G.S. tested 139 rivers in 30 states.
To give an idea how many drug remnants make their way into ponds, creeks and streams, after being passed through humans, sent into sewer systems and released from wastwater treatment plants:
More than 61 million prescriptions for anti-depressants were prescribed by U.S. doctors in 2001, according to the National Center for Health Statistics at the CDC. Because prescriptions like anti-depressants are for chronic conditions, patients often take them for months and years at a time, making them more likely to build up in wastewater
Researchers are working on several fronts to determine how big the problem is and just what short- and long-term ecological effects there might be on wildlife.
Bryan Brooks, a toxicologist at Baylor University in Texas, discovered evidence of Prozac, an anti-depressant, in the brains, livers, and muscles of bluegill, caught downstream from the Pecan Creek Water Reclamation Plant in Denton, Texas, near Dallas.
Unintended consequences
Anti-depressants have the same effect on fish that they do on people: they tend to relax them. That's not necessarily a good thing for the fish, though.
Wastewater treatment plants like the R.M. Clayton plant in Atlanta are not equipped to remove pharmaceuticals from the water.
"We need to ask the question, 'what does accumulation in fish tissue actually mean to the organism's ability to live, grow, or reproduce?'" said Bryan Brooks, a Baylor University toxicologist.
While he and his colleagues discovered those medications in fish in the wild, scientists are now studying aquatic species in the lab, to see just how specific amounts of pills and potions affect them.
Marsha Black, an aquatic toxicologist at the University of Georgia in Athens, found that low levels of common anti-depressants, including Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil and Celexa, cause development problems in fish, and metamorphosis delays in frogs.
"In mosquitofish, markers of sexual maturity were delayed in both males and females," said Black. Metamorphosis in frogs was also delayed significantly, she said.
In the mosquitofish, sexual development in males was delayed by two to four weeks.
Timing is crucial
Black says that timing is crucial to the survival of many water creatures. For example, frog eggs are often laid in ponds and wetlands that are temporary. If tadpoles have not completed metamorphosis by the time the water disappears, they will die before reaching adulthood.
In the next phase of her study, funded by the Environmental Protection Agency, Black will look at the reproductive tissue of the fish affected by the anti-depressants.
Sewage treatment plants are not equipped to filter out any of the hundreds of different prescription drugs that are present in wastewater. And it's not clear just how they would approach the cost or technology of such a challenge.
Michael Smith is manager of the R. M. Clayton wastewater treatment plant in Atlanta, the largest such facility in the southeast. The facility treats about 80 million gallons of water each day.
"Trying to enhance this facility to remove those items would probably require some reverse osmosis or some kind of further ultra filtration system," said Smith. "It would require a lot more construction and a lot more cost to remove those items," he said.
Massive use of prescription drugs killing wildlife
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Massive use of prescription drugs killing wildlife
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"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
In the short term it seems like it might be a good idea to drink distilled water, but that's assuming that these chemicals won't stay in the water when it converts to vapor.
Anyway, it shouldn't be surprising that our increasing chemical dependence is screwing even more things up. Perfume in the water, <ack> I can't stand most of that crap anyway since it makes me itch and sometimes worse.
Anyway, it shouldn't be surprising that our increasing chemical dependence is screwing even more things up. Perfume in the water, <ack> I can't stand most of that crap anyway since it makes me itch and sometimes worse.
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It harks back to the days of DDT and the problems with bioaccumulation of such chemicals in the trophic levels of the surrounding ecosystem. Only when it started showing potential to affect humans did anybody think about pulling the stuff off the shelves. This looks to be more worrying, we know contamination from antibiotics and hormone therapy drugs can cause detrimental effects to people if they consume meat that made contact with such compounds. If this stuff is getting into fresh water supplies, we could see similar problems arising in the not too distant future. Reverse osmosis uses a lot of energy and can be expensive, but the only other alternative is to stop venting the water in the first place.
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This is similar to a problem we might be having in California. Sea Otters are getting sick and they think its from cat litter being flushed down the toilet.
This would be a difficult thing to prevent, you can make it illegal to flush your drugs down the drain, but that does not stop stuff passed in urine. Nor is it easily enforceable.
This would be a difficult thing to prevent, you can make it illegal to flush your drugs down the drain, but that does not stop stuff passed in urine. Nor is it easily enforceable.
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If you drink only distilled or deionized water then you will have to take extra steps to ensure that you have your teeth fluoridated more often than normal.Tsyroc wrote:In the short term it seems like it might be a good idea to drink distilled water, but that's assuming that these chemicals won't stay in the water when it converts to vapor.
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A large chunk of American tapwater isn't fluorinated in the first place.Graeme Dice wrote: If you drink only distilled or deionized water then you will have to take extra steps to ensure that you have your teeth fluoridated more often than normal.
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Doesn't the U.S. government do anything for public health?Sea Skimmer wrote:A large chunk of American tapwater isn't fluorinated in the first place.
"I have also a paper afloat, with an electromagnetic theory of light, which, till I am convinced to the contrary, I hold to be great guns."
-- James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879) Scottish physicist. In a letter to C. H. Cay, 5 January 1865.
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Not when you have nuts that run about claiming that fluoridation is hazardous to our health or some such bullshit. Besides, wouldn't it be bad for the fishies if a lot of flouride was getting into the water supply as well?
Frankly, I think there's just too many humans for the Earth to support at a comfortable lifestyle, but that's an utterly unfounded opinion of mine.
Frankly, I think there's just too many humans for the Earth to support at a comfortable lifestyle, but that's an utterly unfounded opinion of mine.