A new study has revealed that cocaine and its primary metabolite, benzoylecgonine, are altering the behavior of wild Atlantic ...
Scientists found that cocaine pollution in water makes salmon and other fish swim farther and behave differently in the wild.
After scientists exposed wild fish to cocaine and a cocaine metabolite, they observed that, as in the lab, fish on cocaine do ...
Water tests from Suffolk, England, are revealing hard truths about drug contamination in our waterways. Some even tested high ...
An international study, led by researchers from Griffith University, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, the ...
Something is quietly pushing young salmon to wander farther than they should—and it’s not hunger, instinct, or changing ...
Learn about the potential impact of cocaine pollution on Atlantic salmon populations, including migration patterns and ...
A new study shows cocaine contamination in waterways could impact the movement of Atlantic salmon and lead them to swim ...
Scientists found Atlantic salmon exposed to cocaine swam further and lived longer. This study highlights how drugs in waterways change aquatic creature behavior. This is not just pollution but a ...
Salmon are being driven wild by cocaine, reveals new research. Traces of the illicit drug in their natural environment change ...
Sharks off the coast of the Bahamas are ingesting cocaine, painkillers, and caffeine, according to a recent study conducted ...
New research from Griffith University, in collaboration with international partners, has found that cocaine pollution in ...