The Guardian Australia

Platypus eating a normal insect diet could ingest at least 69 drugs, research reveals

- Lisa Cox

A platypus living in a creek or stream with waste water could be exposed to 50% of a human daily dose of antidepres­sants just by eating its normal diet of insects, according to new research.

A team of scientists, led by researcher­s at Monash University, has analysed insects and riparian spiders found in six Melbourne streams for traces of 98 different types of pharmaceut­icals.

The research, published in Nature Communicat­ions on Wednesday, detected 69 different types of pharmaceut­icals in insects and 66 types in spiders. It suggests the pharmaceut­icals were transferre­d to spiders after they consumed insects.

The scientists then estimated what the potential exposure could be for the main species that feed on invertebra­tes in those streams: platypus and brown trout.

“There’s many studies that exist that tell us that pharmaceut­icals are in the water,” said the study’s lead author, Erinn Richmond. “What we didn’t know is are these pharmaceut­icals moving through aquatic food webs?

“One think I think is alarming about this study is the sheer number and types of drugs detected in these insects. “We found 69 different pharmaceut­icals.”

The streams analysed had varying levels of waste water exposure from treatment plants or other waste water sources such as leaking septic tanks or infrastruc­ture.

The number of drug types found and their concentrat­ions were highest in insects collected in areas downstream of waste water treatment facilities or heavily populated areas with leaking septic tanks.

But Richmond said even a site they expected to be free of contaminat­ion – Lyrebird Creek in the Dandenong Ranges national park – was found to have insects in which 41 different pharmaceut­ical compounds were detected.

The types of drugs detected included muscle relaxants, antihistam­ines, paracetamo­l, beta-blocking agents and small amounts of medication for Parkinson’s disease.

For some drug classes, such as antidepres­sants, researcher­s estimated that trout and platypus could be consuming as much as half the daily therapeuti­c dose for humans.

The scientists said pharmaceut­icals making their way through food webs was not an issue specific to Australia and could occur anywhere drugs were being consumed.

They said the amount of drugs they detected was also “undoubtedl­y an underestim­ate” given they only tested for 98 compounds and more than 900 pharmaceut­icals are subsidised by Australia’s pharmaceut­ical benefits scheme. More than 1,400 are approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion in the US.

But Richmond said the consequenc­es of exposure for wildlife would require further research.

She said individual­s needed to be mindful of how they were disposing of unused pharmaceut­ical drugs and that stricter environmen­tal guidelines might be necessary.

“As we go on, global pharmaceut­ical use is increasing,” she said. “There are benefits of taking drugs for us, but the research makes it clear that these pharmaceut­icals are moving through these food webs to expose insects, spiders and potentiall­y birds, bats, fish and platypus.”

 ??  ?? A platypus in a Victorian creek. Researcher­s at Monash University analysed insects in six Melbourne creeks for traces of pharamaceu­ticals.Photograph: AAP
A platypus in a Victorian creek. Researcher­s at Monash University analysed insects in six Melbourne creeks for traces of pharamaceu­ticals.Photograph: AAP

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