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    Scientists detect cocaine for the first time in sharks off the Bahamas

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    By Latest News Editor on March 26, 2026 World News
    Scientists detect cocaine for the first time in sharks off the Bahamas
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    Get you up to speed: Scientists detect cocaine for the first time in sharks off the Bahamas

    Scientists have found traces of cocaine in the blood of sharks swimming in the Bahamas for the first time, as detailed in a study published in Environmental Pollution. Nearly 30 sharks from three species tested positive for drugs, with two of them specifically showing cocaine presence.

    According to a study published in Environmental Pollution, nearly 30 sharks from three species were found to have tested positive for drugs, with cocaine being detected for the first time in sharks off the Bahamas. Natascha Wosnick of the Federal University of Paraná stated that contaminants like pharmaceuticals and illicit drugs are becoming increasingly recognised as concerns in marine environments due to human activities.

    Researchers found traces of cocaine in sharks near the Bahamas for the first time, indicating a potential increase in aggression. Natascha Wosnick of the Federal University of Paraná noted that human activity, such as sewage disposal, likely contributes to this contamination in marine environments.

    Cocaine sharks are terrorising divers off the Caribbean | News World

    Scientists detect cocaine for the first time in sharks off the Bahamas
    Sharks, much like people, can become more aggressive on cocaine (Picture: Getty Images)

    Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water…

    Sharks could be showing more aggression after chomping down on cocaine spilt by tourists in the Caribbean Sea, according to a study published in Environmental Pollution.

    Scientists found nearly 30 sharks, spanning three species, that tested positive for drugs after being caught by a remote island off the coast of the Bahamas.

    The most common was caffeine, followed by acetaminophen and diclofenac, the active ingredients in painkillers Tylenol and Voltaren.

    But two of the prehistoric fish tested positive for cocaine.

    Aerial view of Chat'n'chill Conch bar in Stocking Island in the Caribbean.
    It is the first time cocaine has been detected in sharks off the Bahamas (Picture: Getty Images)

    1 s2.0 S0269749126001880 ga1 lrg 8145
    Scientists have found traces of cocaine in the blood of sharks swimming in the deep blue waters of the Bahamas for the first time (Picture: Environmental Pollution)

    GettyImages 520902572 65e3
    Circling sharks could be high on cocaine (Credits: Getty Images)

    One shark — a baby lemon shark in a nursery creek — tested positive for cocaine.

    The sharks tested exhibited changes in metabolic markers, including lactate and urea.

    But it remains to be seen how these changes might impact their behaviour.

    Most sharks were caught about four miles offshore, around an inactive fish farm popular with divers.

    It remains unclear how the drugs entered their bloodstream. Experts say currents could carry drug traces from sewage, but divers are the more likely culprits.

    ‘Pharmaceuticals and illicit drugs are increasingly recognised as contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) in marine environments, particularly in areas undergoing rapid urbanisation and tourism-driven development,’ scientists said.

    Natascha Wosnick of the Federal University of Paraná in Brazil, told Science News: ‘It’s mostly because people are going there, peeing in the water and dumping their sewage in the water.

    ‘They bite things to investigate and end up exposed.’

    Research in goldfish suggests caffeine increases their energy and focus, Wosnick says, much as it does in humans.

    ?Cocaine Shark?: First report on cocaine and benzoylecgonine detection in sharks
    Sewage containing cocaine is thought to be spilling into the sea where sharks ingest it (Picture: Science Direct)

    Several fishermen have claimed to have seen sharks savaging their way through dumped bricks of cocaine dumped by drug traffickers.

    Hammerheads normally avoid humans, but one filmed for Shark Week came straight for divers, swimming at a strange angle.

    Tracy Fanara, not part of the project but produced a documentary on Cocaine Sharks, says that the findings are ‘a reminder that coastal infrastructure, tourism and marine food webs are tightly connected.’

    Effects of cocaine on humans

    The NHS says cocaine (hydrochloride) is a highly addictive drug. It acts as a short lived central nervous system stimulant and local anaesthetic.

    Common effects of cocaine include:

    anxiety
    confidence
    dilated pupils
    energy
    euphoria
    increased heart rate
    paranoia
    restlessness

    Longer term effects of using cocaine can include:

    dependency

    damage to the heart

    mood swings

    poor sleeping patterns

    impotence

    malnutrition due to suppressed appetite

    difficulties managing your mental health

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