0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Sign in to save

Assessing plastic debris in aquatic food webs: what we know and don’t know about uptake and trophic transfer

Laryngo-Rhino-Otologie 2018 184 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Jennifer F. Provencher, Justine Ammendolia, Chelsea M. Rochman, Mark L. Mallory

Summary

This systematic review synthesized 160 publications through 2016 on plastic ingestion by marine and freshwater biota across multiple trophic levels and regions. While plastic ingestion has been documented across many species and habitats, the review found that few studies have directly tested trophic transfer, and critical questions about bioaccumulation and biomagnification of plastics through food webs remain unanswered.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution is now recognized as a global environmental issue that can affect the health of biota and ecosystems. Now that a growing number of species and taxa are known to ingest a diverse range of sizes and types of plastics and retain the plastics in their guts, there are increasing questions relating to the movement of plastics through food webs, and how biota may directly and indirectly ingest plastics. Here, we synthesize what is known from the published, peer-reviewed literature about plastic ingestion by animals and identify critical gaps in our knowledge. We systematically reviewed and examined the literature for studies that reported ingested plastics in marine and freshwater biota at a global scale. Our objective was to inform discussions and future studies regarding what we know about plastic ingestion and fate in food webs. We assessed what regions, ecosystems, and food webs have been studied to date and whether potential information may already be available to assess if trophic transfer of plastics may be occurring. We found 160 relevant publications through 2016. Most studies were concentrated in specific regions and in specific ecosystem types, with freshwater studies being the most limited. Moreover, most studies examined one species at a time with only a handful of regions with multiple taxa examined across multiple studies. Twenty-one percent of the regions have no published data on plastic ingestion to date. Although some studies have measured ingestion in multiple species across trophic levels, few have tested the hypothesis that plastics are transferred across trophic levels. Moreover, none have addressed questions related to biomagnification. While our review suggests that numerous papers have recorded the ingestion of plastics by biota across many trophic levels, habitats, and geographic regions, many questions regarding how or whether biota retain, bioaccumulate, biomagnify, and trophically transfer plastics still need to be addressed.

Share this paper