BrainStuff Classics: Is Prozac Endangering Crabs' Survival? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: Is Prozac Endangering Crabs' Survival?

May 08, 20214 min
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Episode description

When we take medications, we sometimes excrete chemicals that get flushed into our oceans. Learn how fluoxetine (Prozac) is chilling crabs out -- which isn't great -- in this classic BrainStuff episode, based on this article: https://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/prozac-water-ocean-crab-behavior.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogelbaum here with another classic episode from our archives. We hear a brain Stuff are huge proponents of managing your mental health. However it works best for you, whether that's through lifestyle changes, some kind of talk, therapy, or medication. But because of the many medications that humans take, we also need to take care of how they may affect the environment. This episode is a study in Prozac

and crabs. Hey there, brain Stuff, Lauren Vogelbam Here. Forty years have gone by. It's the debut of the popular antidepressant flu oxytine, popularly known by the trade name prozac. It's in a class of antidepressants called s s R EYES that's selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. They give the brain a little boost in serotonin, the chemical in the brain

thought to affect happiness. After all this time, it's still the most effective and popular antidepressant on the market, and experts say it's not getting replaced anytime soon, and since demand for the drug is rising each year, it looks like more fluoxetine will be in our medicine cabinets and as a result, that means we'll have more fluoxetine in our environment, and researchers want to know what it's doing.

It's not news that we ingest all kinds of chemicals oral contraceptives, antibiotics, mood enhancers, and even caffeine that end up in our toilets since our bodies can't entirely metabolize them, and after they're flushed, chemicals like fluoxetine end up in rivers and streams, and after that in the oceans. What effect that these chemicals have on ecosystems once they show up isn't well understood, but one sixteen study found that even small doses of the drug can render the notoriously

aggressive Siamese fighting fish uncharacteristically chill. A new study published in the journal Ecology and Evolution examines the effect of fluoxetine on shore crabs on the Oregon Coast and finds exposure to the drug might be making them careless in their foraging habits. A Portland State University research team exposed shore crabs in a lab to trace amounts of fluoxetine at levels that have been detected on the organ shore.

Over the course of sixty days, they found these crabs forged more during times of the day they typically stay hidden, exposing them to the threat of predation. These crabs also fought more with others in their species, sometimes killing or

being killed in the process. A researcher, a Lease Grantic, a professor in Portland State University's Department of Environmental Sciences and Management, sudden to press release the changes we observed in their behaviors may mean that crabs living in harbors and estuaries contaminated with fluoxetine are at a greater risk of predation and mortality. Further research is needed to learn how this and other pharmaceutical waste will affect our oceans

and what we can do about it. But for now, you can help a little by contacting your doctor or pharmacy to dispose of any unwanted medications instead of throwing them in the trash or toilet. Today's episode is based on the article Prozac making its way into oceans might be affecting crab behavior on how stuff works dot Com, written by Jesselyn Shields. Brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio in partnership with how stuff works dot Com, and it is produced by Tyler Clang four more podcasts

from my heart Radio. Visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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