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Pharmaceutical pollution in waterways is changing animal behavior. Exposure to an antianxiety drug is affecting migrating ...
A benzodiazepine seeping into waterways is causing young Atlantic salmon to behave strangely, with fish in the wild migrating ...
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Drug Pollution and Salmon Migration: Behavioral Changes in the WildPharmaceutical pollution is an emerging global issue, with over 900 active substances detected in waterways worldwide. Recent ...
A recent study in Sweden's Dal River reveals that pharmaceutical pollution, specifically anti-anxiety medication, ...
A fish walks into a pharmacy ... well, not exactly. Fish aren't being prescribed anti-anxiety drugs. But they are ...
Pharmaceutical pollution is rampant across the United States, which has created some of the fastest and most carefree salmon ...
Clobazam, a benzodiazepine used to treat anxiety, has been found to affect Atlantic salmon in similar ways to humans.
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNSalmon Are Being Exposed to Our Anti-Anxiety Medication, and It’s Making Them Take More Risks, Study SuggestsAtlantic salmon exposed to a common anti-anxiety drug migrate faster, according to new research. That's not necessarily a ...
Study reveals commonly detected environmental levels of clobazam -- a medication often prescribed for sleep disorders -- increased the river-to-sea migration success of juvenile salmon in the wild.
Wild salmon are swimming quicker due to painkillers and other drugs dumped in rivers and the sea, reveals new research.
In the largest study of its kind to date, a team of international researchers has investigated how pharmaceutical pollution ...
We followed the entire river-to-sea migration of juvenile salmon in a natural river system, using drug concentrations that match what fish are actually exposed to in the environment.” ...
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