• Several drugs, including fentanyl, found in bottleneck dolphins in Gulf

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 7 09:08:29 2024
    XPost: alt.drugs.fentanyl, alt.animals.dolphins, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns

    Scientists have detected fentanyl and other drugs in dozens of dolphins
    from the Gulf of Mexico, which could have large implications on the
    overall health of the oceans, they say.

    The research began in September 2020, when marine biologists conducting a routine boating survey to monitor the dolphin population in the Gulf of
    Mexico came across a deceased dolphin floating in the water, Dara Orbach,
    an assistant professor at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi's marine
    biology program and co-author of the study, told ABC News.

    The scientists could tell that the dolphin had just died because its tail
    was still moving, Orbach said. So, they decided to tow it back to campus
    to study.

    Years later, when graduate student Makayla Guinn needed dolphin tissue
    samples for her research on hormones, the biologists retrieved some
    blubber from that dolphin to study, Orbach said.

    The researchers then teamed up with Texas A&M-Corpus Christi biochemist, Hussain Abdulla, who lent out his laboratory for the marine biologists to
    run an untargeted analysis to see just what was inside these tissues. An untargeted analysis involves an instrument to indicate whether there are chemicals in the tissue, Christiana Wittmaack a toxicologist at Precision Toxicological Consultancy and co-author of the paper, told ABC News.

    Although they were just looking for hormones, thousands of compounds were generated within the analysis. The researchers were especially shocked
    when they selected three specific compounds that they thought would be
    unlikely to find in a dolphin -- fentanyl, a muscle relaxant and a
    sedative -- and found that the sample tissue contained traces of all
    three.

    For her honor student undergraduate project, Anya Ocampos then ran 89
    dolphin samples through a mass spectrometer -- 83 of which were from
    biopsies of live dolphins located in Laguna Madre, a shallow lagoon near
    Corpus Christi Bay in South Texas. Fentanyl was the most prevalent of the
    drugs tested, found in 24 of the samples, the researchers found.

    Not only did all of the dead samples test positive for at least one of the drugs, but some of them were from historic samples taken from the
    Mississippi Sound in 2013, which suggests that the drugs have been in the
    Gulf of Mexico's waterways for a long period of time, Orbach said.

    In addition, dolphins don't drink water, Orbach said. The marine mammal
    obtains the majority of its hydration from its prey, therefore those
    animals would likely also have these contaminants in their system.

    "So it's possible that this is a widespread and longstanding prevalent
    issue that simply has not been addressed," she said.

    The drugs and other contaminants could be coming from a number of places, including dermal contact or the water itself, Wittmaack said.

    Drugs being thrown overboard, since they are located so close to the
    Mexican border, agricultural runoff, or human wastewater could also be
    sources of the chemicals, Orbach said.

    The dolphin found in 2020 was located adjacent to Robstown County, the
    location of the largest liquid fentanyl drug bust in U.S. history in 2023.

    "This is something that we really need to monitor with time, so that we
    need to make sure that we're not seeing increases in in fentanyl concentrations," Wittmaack said.

    There have never been any studies to show what the long-term effects of pharmaceuticals are in marine mammals, Orbach said.

    Although the traces found were low amounts, the water pollution is the
    latest in a series of stressors that marine animals are facing.

    "These are animals are subjected to constant noise pollution, vessel
    traffic, dredging, algal blooms, oil spills, chemical spills," Orbach
    said. "...When you add more and more factors, at some point the animal is
    so susceptible that they can't respond it."

    https://abcnews.go.com/International/drugs-including-fentanyl-found- bottleneck-dolphins-gulf-mexico/story?id=116523978

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)