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Human Health Effects
Marine & Wildlife
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Sub-chronic exposure to paroxetine disrupts ecologically relevant behaviours in fish
The Science of The Total Environment2024
7 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 55
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Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Carla Ferreira,
Mónica Almeida,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Miguel Oliveira,
Isabel Lopes,
Mónica Almeida,
Mónica Almeida,
Mónica Almeida,
Mónica Almeida,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Peter Kille
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Mónica Almeida,
Miguel Oliveira,
Mónica Almeida,
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Mónica Almeida,
Mónica Almeida,
Miguel Oliveira,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Peter Kille
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Miguel Oliveira,
Mónica Almeida,
Mónica Almeida,
Mónica Almeida,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Peter Kille
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Peter Kille
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Miguel Oliveira,
Cátia Venâncio,
Mónica Almeida,
Cátia Venâncio,
Mónica Almeida,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Peter Kille
Peter Kille
Cátia Venâncio,
Cátia Venâncio,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Isabel Lopes,
Isabel Lopes,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Miguel Oliveira,
Peter Kille
Peter Kille
Summary
Researchers exposed adult zebrafish to paroxetine, a common antidepressant (SSRI) found in waterways, and found that even at low concentrations it reduced swimming activity, dulled stress responses, and altered anxiety-like behavior — suggesting pharmaceutical pollution may impair the ability of wild fish to respond to predators and survive.
The functional conservation of important selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) targets in non-target organisms raises concerns about their potential adverse effects on the ecosystems. Although the environmental levels of SSRIs like paroxetine (PAR) have risen, the knowledge regarding the effects of long-term exposure to PAR is limited. This study investigated the impact of sub-chronic exposure (21 days) to two sub-lethal concentrations of PAR (40 and 400 μg/L) on the behaviour of adult zebrafish in different scenarios: basal activity (under dark and light conditions), stress response (evoked by sudden light transitions) and stress response recovery. A new framework was employed for the integrative study of fish's swimming performance based on their innate ability to respond to light shifts. Several swimming-associated parameters (e.g., total swimming distance, time of inactivity, swimming angles) and thigmotaxis were monitored for an integrated analysis in each scenario. Data revealed reduced swimming activity, impaired behavioural response to stress and alterations in stress recovery of PAR-exposed fish. An anxiolytic effect was particularly noticeable in fish basal swimming activity in the dark at 400 μg/L and in the behavioural response to stress (from dark to light) and stress recovery (from light to dark) for organisms exposed to 40 μg/L. The detected PAR-induced behavioural modifications suggest a disruption of brain glucocorticoid signalling that may have implications at the individual level (e.g., changing behavioural responses to predators), with potential repercussions on the population and community levels. Therefore, the applied protocol proved sensitive in detecting behavioural changes induced by PAR.