posted on 2025-04-24, 01:10authored byJack A Brand, Marcus Michelangeli, Samuel J Shry, Eleanor R Moore, Aneesh PH Bose, Daniel Cerveny, Jake M Martin, Gustav Hellström, Erin S McCallum, Annika Holmgren, Eli SJ Thoré, Jerker Fick, Tomas Brodin, Michael G Bertram
Despite the growing threat of pharmaceutical pollution, we lack an understanding of whether and how such pollutants influence animal behavior in the wild. Using laboratory- and field-based experiments across multiple years in Atlantic salmon (
Salmo salar
;
n
= 730), we show that the globally detected anxiolytic pollutant clobazam accumulates in the brain of exposed fish and influences river-to-sea migration success. Clobazam exposure increased the speed with which fish passed through two hydropower dams along their migration route, resulting in more clobazam-exposed fish reaching the sea compared with controls. We argue that such effects may arise from altered shoaling behavior in fish exposed to clobazam. Drug-induced behavioral changes are expected to have wide-ranging consequences for the ecology and evolution of wild populations.