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Quantitative assessment of microplastics in fish from the Gulf of Guinea, Ghana, using LDIR spectroscopy: Implications for marine food safety and health risk evaluation

Environmental Pollution 2025 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Pennante Bruce‐Vanderpuije, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Pennante Bruce‐Vanderpuije, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Ruby Asmah, Ruby Asmah, Lars Hildebrandt Ralf Ebinghaus, Miriam Ameworwor, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Ishmael Cudjoe Norvimagbe, Ishmael Cudjoe Norvimagbe, Ralf Ebinghaus, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Ruby Asmah, Divine Worlanyo Hotor, Ruby Asmah, Divine Worlanyo Hotor, Ruby Asmah, Ruby Asmah, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Ralf Ebinghaus, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Ralf Ebinghaus, Ralf Ebinghaus, Ralf Ebinghaus, Kwadwo Ansong Asante, Kwadwo Ansong Asante, Hasnah Mohd Zaid, Ralf Ebinghaus, Ishmael Cudjoe Norvimagbe, Kwadwo Ansong Asante, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Kwadwo Ansong Asante, Daniel Pröfrock, Abigail Akuetteh Nunoo, Mike Y. Osei‐Atweneboana, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt

Summary

Researchers analyzed microplastic contamination in 24 marine fish species from coastal Ghana and found plastics in 58% of gastrointestinal tracts and 42% of gill samples. Omnivorous fish had the highest microplastic ingestion rates, and PVC was the most prevalent polymer type identified using advanced laser imaging. The findings raise food safety concerns, as these fish species are commonly consumed by the local population.

Polymers
Body Systems

In this study, microplastic (MP) contamination was investigated in 24 marine fish species from 3 environmental hotspots- Labadi, Teshie, and Jamestown, along Ghana's Gulf of Guinea coastline. Specific fish species studied included Pseudotolithus senegalensis, Sphyraena guachancho, Brachydeuterus auratus, Chloroscombrus chrysurus, and Ethmalosa frimbriata. Fifty-eight percent of the total MPs were detected in the gastrointestinal tracts, and 42% detected in gills of 177 individual fish tested in this study. Labadi showed the highest contamination levels [mean MP concentration: 22 ± 19 (items fish)-1]. Omnivorous fish species had the highest mean ingestion rate of MPs (19.4), surpassing both carnivorous (17.7) and herbivorous species (13.5), and indicating dietary habits as a significant factor in MP bioaccumulation. White-coloured MP films (60%) of sizes: 100-1000 µm were the dominant ingested shape. Other MP shapes included fragments (26.3%), fibres (10.5%), beads (1.05%), and foam (0.61%). Using advanced spectroscopic technique such as Laser Direct Infrared (LDIR) Imaging, 16 MP polymers were characterized with polyvinyl chloride (PVC) being the prevalent MP polymer type (80%). The study observed a strong positive correlation between carnivorous demersal and omnivorous pelagic-neritic fish for specific MP polymers, suggesting that factors other than polymer density influence MP consumption patterns for fish habitats within the water column. The annual MP exposure to Ghanaian adults via fish consumption [(194-29,239 MP items (person year)-1] significantly exceeded the European Safety guidelines [518-3078 (items year)-1], emphasizing dietary habits and environmental pollution as key factors. This study provides a critical baseline on MP pollution in Ghanaian marine ecosystems, highlighting the urgent need for interventions to mitigate plastic pollution, protect marine biodiversity, safeguard marine food, and public health in West Africa.

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