Kuwait Times

Antidepres­sants change songbirds courtship rituals

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LONDON: Songbirds altered their courtship behavior following exposure to antidepres­sants increasing­ly found in the natural environmen­t, according to scientists in Britain who conducted a three-year study. Male starlings sang less and were more aggressive towards females who had been given small doses of the antidepres­sant fluoxetine, commonly known as Prozac, researcher­s at the University of York found.

They believe the study-to be published in the journal Chemospher­e-shows such changes in behavior could put songbirds at risk in the wild. “Here is the first evidence that low concentrat­ions of an antidepres­sant can disrupt the courtship of songbirds,” said Kathryn Arnold, from the university’s environmen­t department. “This is important because animals that are slow to find a mate often won’t get to breed. “With many wildlife population­s in decline, we have to ask whether more could be done to remove chemical contaminan­ts like pharmaceut­icals from our sewage.”

River systems around the world are coursing with over-the-counter and prescripti­on drugs waste which harms the environmen­t, according to the European Geoscience­s Union conference in Vienna in April. If trends persist, the amount of pharmaceut­ical effluence leaching into waterways could increase by twothirds before 2050, it was reported. In Britain, there were 64.7 million antidepres­sant items prescribed in 2016, the York study noted.

Like other human pharmaceut­icals, they enter the environmen­t via sewage and contaminat­e birds foraging on invertebra­tes at wastewater treatment plants. With the implicatio­ns poorly understood, the York scientists tested the impact on starlings, a species commonly found feeding at such sites. The most visible results emerged after they paired males for two days with a female who had been dosed with prozac, with changes in typical behavior. — AFP

 ??  ?? PARIS: In this file photo, a European starling is pictured in the Carrousel gardens near the Louvre museum in Paris. — AFP
PARIS: In this file photo, a European starling is pictured in the Carrousel gardens near the Louvre museum in Paris. — AFP

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