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Cocaine and caffeine detected in shark in the Bahamas, study shows

A new study is revealing that sharks in The Bahamas have tested positive for cocaine, caffeine and other substances

Published April 5, 2026, 4:26 PM
Updated April 5, 2026, 4:42 PM1.4K
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Cocaine and caffeine detected in shark in the Bahamas, study shows

According to ScienceDirect, substances like cocaine and painkillers, also known as contaminants of emerging concern, are being recognized in marine environments, especially in tourism-driven areas.

A Tiger shark underwater in the ocean
A Tiger shark, one of five species captured for the study, at Tiger Beach, BahamasAndre Seale / VW Pics / Universal Images Group via Getty Images file

By NBC South Florida

A new study is revealing that sharks in The Bahamas have tested positive for cocaine, caffeine and other substances.

According to ScienceDirect, substances like cocaine and painkillers, also known as contaminants of emerging concern, are being recognized in marine environments, especially in tourism-driven areas.

In their study, 82 sharks were analyzed, and 23 of them were detected to have four CECs: acetaminophen, diclofenac, cocaine, and caffeine.

Five species of sharks were captured for the study, including Lemon, Atlantic Nurse, Blacktip, Caribbean Reef and Tiger sharks.

While this isn’t the first time cocaine was detected in sharks; in 2024, more than 10 sharks in waters off the coast of Brazil tested positive for cocaine, this was the “first report of caffeine and acetaminophen detected in any shark species worldwide, and the first report of diclofenac and cocaine in sharks from The Bahamas, an environment commonly described as pristine,” the study said.

The study also showed that sharks that had CEC’s “showed altered triglycerides, urea, and lactate levels,” compared to sharks that didn’t have it.

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