0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Microplastic ingestion and Phthalate ester levels as plastic tracers in the Mediterranean Velella velella: a candidate plastic indicator for the pelagic neustonic environment

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2025 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Cristina Panti, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Margherita Concato, Margherita Concato, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Margherita Concato, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Margherita Concato, Cristina Panti, Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Margherita Concato, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Margherita Concato, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Margherita Concato, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Margherita Concato, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Margherita Concato, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, Matteo Galli, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Margherita Concato, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Matteo Baini, María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Cristina Panti, Matteo Galli, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Cristina Panti, Matteo Baini, Cristina Panti, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi

Summary

Researchers used Mediterranean fish and invertebrates as bioindicators of plastic pollution, correlating microplastic ingestion levels with phthalate ester concentrations in their tissues to validate the use of combined biological monitoring for tracking spatial and temporal trends in marine plastic contamination.

Polymers

Bioindicator species can help assess plastic pollution's impact on biodiversity by integrating spatial distribution and temporal trends, highlighting associated ecological risks. To investigate a potential indicator for pelagic neustonic environments, the holoplanktonic hydrozoan V. velella was collected in the Pelagos Sanctuary (SPAMI, NW Mediterranean Sea). A total of 460 individuals from 27 stations were collected alongside manta net trawls. Isolated organisms were digested through an alkaline solution and examined for the presence of microplastics (MPs). The correlation among the abundance of floating microplastics in the area, microplastic ingestion and levels of 11 Phthalate Acid Esters (PAEs) in V. velella have been investigated to provide a comprehensive assessment of the multiple stressors impacting this species. Over 200 MPs were isolated, with an occurrence of 93 % in the sampling stations (0.6 ± 0.7 items/individual). Polyester filamentous-shape particles (including fibres and filaments; 81 %) and polyamide, polyolefin and polystyrene fragments (17 %) were the predominant particle types. PAEs concentration averaged 313 ± 66 ng/g w.w. with Dibutyl-phthalate, Diisobutyl-phthalate, and Diethylhexyl-phthalate, listed as reprotoxic by EU regulation, comprising 95 % of total compounds. Despite no statistical correlation, a slightly positive trend between ingested plastic and total PAEs load was found shedding light on the potential direct release from particles. With its wide distribution, key trophic role, ability to capture smaller MPs fractions (<300 μm) and fibres and to accumulate the chemicals from the surrounding environment, V. velella emerges as a promising bioindicator of MPs pollution in the pelagic areas of the Mediterranean Sea and the other seas and oceans worldwide.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper