THE TELEGRAPH
Cocaine has been found in sharks off the coast of Brazil and may be changing their behaviour, scientists fear.
Marine biologists tested 13 sharks of the Brazilian sharpnose type taken from coastal waters near Rio de Janeiro and found they all had high levels of cocaine in their muscles and livers.
In a paper for the journal Science of the Total Environment, they said the drug probably originated in drainage from illicit labs where cocaine is manufactured, or from the excrement of drug users, via untreated sewage.
It might even have come from the sharks feeding on bales of cocaine that were lost or dumped overboard by drug smugglers – but that was less likely, the team said.
The results showed “chronic exposure due to human use of cocaine in Rio de Janeiro and the discharge of human urine and faeces by sewage outfalls, as well as from illegal labs”, said Dr Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis, a British scientist and member of the research team from the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation in Rio de Janeiro.
‘We don’t get much coke at sea’
“We don’t usually see many bales of coke dumped or lost at sea here, unlike in Mexico and Florida,” she told The Telegraph, meaning it was unlikely the sharks had been eating discarded packages.
The cocaine was probably harmful to the health of the animals, she said. It was not known if it affected their behaviour, rendering them more aggressive and unpredictable or making feeding frenzies more likely.
“This may be the case, as cocaine targets the brain, and hyperactive and erratic behaviour has been noted in other animals. It’s a possibility and further studies are required,” said Dr Enrico Mendes Saggioro, an ecotoxicologist from the Oswaldo Cruz Institute.
The researchers acquired the small sharks from fishing boats that ply the coastal waters off Rio de Janeiro.