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Ecotoxicological Effects of Nanoplastic and Microplastic Polystyrene Particles on Hyalella azteca: A Comprehensive Study on the Impact of Physical and Chemical Surface Properties

Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Agnieszka Dąbrowska, Evita Strode, Łukasz Kurach, Łukasz Kurach, Marcin Stachowicz

Summary

Researchers studied the ecotoxicological effects of polystyrene nano- and microplastics on the freshwater crustacean Hyalella azteca through short- and long-term exposure experiments. The study found that surface properties and functional group modifications of the particles were key determinants of toxicity, with amino-functionalized microplastics and fluorescent nanoplastics showing significant effects on oxidative stress biomarkers and organism development, while unmodified nanoplastics were nearly inert.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The ecotoxicological effects of nanoplastic (NPs) and microplastic (MPs) polystyrene particles' (PS) on Hyalella azteca were studied in three tests designed to investigate various hypotheses and explore potential mechanisms of interaction between MPs, NPs and this species. The following materials were used: fluorescent nanoplastic nanoPS of 15-18 nm diameter, non-modified nanoPS 25 nm, and functionalized (aminometyl)polystyrene (PS-NH). Short-term exposure of 7 and 14 days, and long-term exposure of 42 days, were conducted using three different types of PS at varying concentrations (0.01, 0.18, 1, 18, 180 mg L). The experiments were carried out through two methods: PS introduced via food and PS dispersed in the environment (referred to as the "medium"). The effects were comprehensively assessed by measuring the activity of selected oxidative stress biomarkers (acetylcholinesterase AChE, catalase CAT, and glutathione s-transferase GST), and monitoring parameters such as size, growth, reproduction rate, and the presence of possible malformations. The statistically significant effect was observed with PS-NH (37-74 μm) and fluorescent nanoPS (15-18 nm), whereas nanoPS of 25 nm were nearly inert. The discussion is focused on four observed aspects: (i) the impact of the surface characteristics and functional group modifications of PS particles on their overall effect on biota, (ii) the limitations of using a typical concentration parameter for tests comparison, with a proposal to adopt total surface area of MPs and NPs instead - reflecting the overall surface exposed to the environment, rather than solely relying on the mass or volume, (iii) the influence of feeding regimen (exposure at varying concentrations in food or medium compared to no exposure) on the ecotoxicological effect, and (iv) the potential of Hyalella azteca as a sentinel species for monitoring microplastic transport in both freshwater and brackish waters environments. Finally, the physical and chemical properties of all three PS types were characterized to better understand their mutual interaction with biota from the material perspective.

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