Chronic ingestion of polystyrene microparticles in low doses has no effect on food consumption and growth to the intertidal amphipod Echinogammarus marinus?

Sarah Bruck, Alex Ford

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    Abstract

    The ingestion of microplastics (plastic particles <5 mm) has been observed in a range of marine organisms, and adverse effects have been reported in several species after high concentration exposure. However, the long-term effects of low-dose ingestion remains unclear. The aim of this study was thus to assess the chronic effects of low concentrations of polystyrene microparticles to the intertidal amphipod Echinogammarus marinus, using food consumption, growth, and moulting as endpoints. Amphipods were fed a gelatinous algal feed spiked with microbeads (8 μm) in concentrations of ~0.9, 9 and 99 microplastics/g for 35 days. E. marinus was also analysed for retention of microplastics, and egestion rate was calculated in a separate high-dose feeding experiment. No significant effects were found in the food consumption or growth assays. There was no accumulation of microplastics in the gut, with only one microbead recorded internally in three (8%) of the exposed amphipods. The low number is likely linked to gastrointestinal functions, allowing for easy egestion of indigestible items. This assumption was supported by the observation that after high-dose exposure, 60 % of E. marinus egested all microbeads within 24 hours. This study suggests that ingesting low concentrations of 8μm microplastics do not impair the feeding or growth of amphipods along the exposure period. We hope that negative results such as these may further assist in assessing the impact posed by microplastics to marine organisms.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1125-1130
    Number of pages6
    JournalEnvironmental Pollution
    Volume233
    Early online date14 Oct 2017
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2018

    Keywords

    • microplastics
    • ingestion
    • growth
    • feeding
    • Echinogammarus marius
    • amphipod
    • chronic
    • low-dose

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