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Microplastic pollution in marine bivalves, surface water and sediments from an aquaculture in Portugal and possible intake by humans

Regional Studies in Marine Science 2025 2 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.
Daniela C.C. Silva, Ana Borba, Hermínio C. de Sousa, João C. Marques, Ana M. M. Gonçalves

Summary

Researchers assessed microplastic contamination in oysters, clams, surface water, and sediments at a Portuguese shellfish farm and estimated the resulting daily human intake from consuming these organisms. Diploid oysters and clams had higher microplastic levels than triploid oysters, and seasonal differences in accumulation were observed. The study provides practical estimates of how much microplastic people may consume through shellfish, contributing to ongoing efforts to quantify dietary exposure.

Body Systems

The abundance and types of microplastics (MP) were assessed in different tissues of Magallana gigas (diploid and triploid oysters) and Ruditapes philippinarum (clams), surface water and sediments in a Portuguese shellfish farm. The daily MP intake by humans through the consumption of these organisms was estimated. Diploid oysters (0.33–5.00 MP particles/tissues) and clams (0.00–3.33 MP particles/tissues) showed higher MP abundances than triploid oysters (0.00–1.00 MP particles/tissues). Seasonal differences in MP abundance were observed in diploid oysters (visceral mass: winter lower than autumn, spring and summer; digestive gland: autumn and winter lower than summer; gills: autumn, spring and summer lower than winter), triploid oysters (gills: summer lower than autumn) and clams (digestive gland and gills: autumn, winter and summer lower than spring; foot: autumn lower than spring and summer). The highest MP abundances were observed in the visceral mass (5.00 MP particles/tissue in diploid oysters), digestive gland (3.33 MP particles/tissue in clams) and gills (1.00 MP particles/tissue in triploid oysters). Pink MP films (1–100 µm) were predominantly found in these bivalves. MPs were detected in surface water (0.00–5.33 MP particles/L) and sediments (15.47–114.55 MP particles/kg). Temporal variations in MP abundance were observed in surface water (low tide: Oct19, Nov19, Jan20, Feb20, Mar20, Aug20 and Sep20 lower than Sep19 and Dec19; high tide: Nov19 lower than Dec19, Ap20 and May20) and sediments (low tide: Sep19, Oct19, Jan20, Jun20, Jul20, Aug20 and Sep20 lower than Dec19 and Apr20). Tidal variations were detected in sediments (Nov19, Dec19 and May20: high tide lower than low tide). MPs in surface water were predominantly transparent fibers (100–2500 µm), while those observed in sediments were blue fragments (100–2500 µm). The main polymers identified were poly(propylene) and poly(ethylene). The highest daily MP intake values were observed in adults, very elderly and pregnant women. • Film MPs were found in M. gigas (diploid and triploid) and R. philippinarum . • MPs were found mainly in visceral mass, digestive gland and gills. • Fiber and fragment MPs were found in water and sediments. • Poly(propylene) and poly(ethylene) were the main polymers detected.

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