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Spatial patterns of microplastics in freshwater bivalves (Bivalvia: Unionidae and Sphaeriidae) relative to municipal wastewater effluent discharges

Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 2025 2 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.
Emily L Robson, Karen A. Kidd, Evlyn K Sun, Patricia L. Gillis, Ryan S. Prosser

Summary

Microplastics were found in freshwater bivalves (fingernail clams and mussels) collected along 155 km of Ontario's Grand River, with significantly higher concentrations downstream of municipal wastewater treatment plant discharges, confirming WWTPs as key sources of microplastic contamination in filter-feeding freshwater organisms.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are discharged by municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs); however, their uptake by filter-feeding freshwater bivalves is poorly understood. This study examined the abundance and characteristics of microplastics in wild bivalves from five locations along a 155 km stretch of the Grand River (Ontario, Canada) in 2021-2022, including upstream and downstream of three municipal WWTPs. At each site, fingernail clams (Sphaeriidae spp., n = 5 composites), freshwater mussels (Lasmigona costata, n = 10; gill, digestive gland, and hemolymph), and surface water (n = 3) were sampled at a single timepoint. Microplastics (particles >38 μm to 5 mm) were isolated and visualized via stereomicroscopy, and a subset chemically analyzed using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Fingernail clams contained the highest total blank corrected microparticle counts (35.5 ± 29.4 g-1 [mean ± SD]), mussel tissues ranged from 4.3 ± 4.2 mL-1 in hemolymph to 6.5 ± 8.1 g-1 in digestive gland, and water contained 5.5 ± 2.8 L-1. Fibers were the dominant morphology across all samples, most particles were between 80 μm and 2 mm in length and, of those analyzed chemically, 30.0% were a plastic polymer. At sites downstream of WWTP outfalls, elevated counts were only seen in mussel gills and not in other bivalve tissues or water compared with upstream samples. Although microplastics were found across all sites in both biotic and abiotic compartments, results suggest little impact of WWTP discharges on their uptake in downstream bivalves.

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