Platypus eating a normal insect diet could ingest at least 69 drugs, research reveals
by Lisa Cox from on (#42C7D)
Insects near waste water could give a platypus or trout half a human dose of antidepressants
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.
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