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Several drugs, including fentanyl, found in bottlenose dolphins in Gulf of Mexico

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.

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by Anonymousreply 7December 8, 2024 10:05 AM

Humans really are the scourge of the Earth.

by Anonymousreply 1December 8, 2024 4:01 AM

Dolph-face thread.

by Anonymousreply 2December 8, 2024 4:03 AM

Seriously, R1, we have destroyed everything.

[quote]some of them were from historic samples taken from the Mississippi Sound in 2013

[quote]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.

I'm assuming fish & crustaceans. There are microplastics in human blood and testicles, now I'm curious if human tissue samples would have traces of drugs.

by Anonymousreply 3December 8, 2024 6:05 AM

[quote] There are microplastics in human blood and testicles, now I'm curious if human tissue samples would have traces of drugs.

That could be one explanation for why everyone is acting so crazy nowdays.

by Anonymousreply 4December 8, 2024 8:07 AM

Does this explain why those orcas are attacking boats off Portugal's coast?

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by Anonymousreply 5December 8, 2024 8:19 AM

[quote] Does this explain why those orcas are attacking boats off Portugal's coast?

No, but it might explain why the Orca are wearing fish on top of their heads....

[italic]A group of orcas off the west coast of North America has brought back a bizarre fashion trend not seen since the late 1980s: wearing a single dead salmon on their heads as if it were a hat.

Experts are at a loss to explain why orcas would want to wear fish in the first place, let alone why they would want to bring back the practice almost 40 years after it stopped.

The salmon hat craze was first observed in 1987 when a female orca in the Puget Sound area of the northeast Pacific was seen carrying a solitary dead fish on her nose. Within a few weeks the behavior was picked up by members of other pods, suggesting something about it must have appealed.

Strangely, it would be a seasonal fashion. By 1988 the behavior was apparently passé, stopping as suddenly as it started.

Recent observations from photographers and researchers have confirmed it's happening again.

It's not clear if the whales are showing off, or storing food to eat later. Orcas have been known to store pieces of spare food under their pectoral fins, so this may be an adapted form of that behavior.

It's possible there's some significance to the hats within the communities the orcas live in. It could simply be as it seems – whimsical absurdity that amuses the animals on some playful level.

Or it could just feel good. Humpback whales have previously been seen wearing hats of seaweed, which some have speculated is because they like the sensation. Considering orcas can live for up to 90 years, it could be that some of the same whales are involved (it's the same part of the ocean, and it's not been seen anywhere else). Maybe it was just time for a salmon hat revival.

"Honestly, your guess is as good as mine," Deborah Giles, the science and research director at the nonprofit Wild Orca, told Colin Barras at New Scientist.[/italic]

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by Anonymousreply 6December 8, 2024 8:27 AM

Even without humans polluting our oceans, dolphins would still find a way to get fucked up.

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by Anonymousreply 7December 8, 2024 10:05 AM
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