Tuesday, July 06, 2021

Methamphetamine in rivers can turn brown trout into addicts


Illegal drugs like methamphetamine can leach into urban waterways and alter the behavior of resident fish, according to a new study. File Photo by Kaesler Media/Shutterstock.com


July 6 (UPI) -- The physiological effects of prescribed drugs on freshwater species have been documented by dozens of studies, but less attention has been paid to the influence of illicit drugs on the behavior of aquatic animals.

In a new study, published Tuesday in the Journal of Experimental Biology, scientists in the Czech Republic found brown trout can become addicted to low levels of methamphetamine.

Previous surveys have revealed low levels of methamphetamines and other illicit substances in urban waterways.

"Whether illicit drugs alter fish behavior at levels increasingly observed in surface water bodies was [previously] unclear," lead study author Pavel Horký, researcher at the Czech University of Life Sciences in Prague, said in a press release.

To find out, Horký and his colleagues exposed several brown trout to small traces of methamphetamine. After spending two months in the drug-laced holding tanks, the fish were released into tanks of clean water.

Scientists hypothesized that if the brown trout, Salmo trutta, had become addicted, they would experience withdrawal and seek out even tiny amounts of the drug.

When presented with a choice of new water tanks to explore, the fish experiencing withdrawal consistently opted for water with small amounts of methamphetamine. The control fish showed no such preference.

Even though the fish were exposed to only tiny amounts of the drug, researchers found methamphetamine in the brains of brown trout up to 10 days after exposure ceased.

Observations revealed addicted brown trout were less active than their sober peers.

According to the study's authors, drug exposure could render brown trout less fit for survival in increasingly disturbed freshwater habitats.

Addiction could even cause trout to gravitate toward more polluted water sources in search of a fix, they said.

"The elicitation of drug addiction in wild fish could represent another example of unexpected pressure on species living in urban environments," Horký said.

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