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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 Gut & Microbiome Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Pervasive Microplastic Ingestion by Commercial Fish Species from a Natural Lagoon Environment

Water 2024 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, B. C. G. Dias, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, B. C. G. Dias, Alexandra R. McGoran, Alexandra R. McGoran, Alexandra R. McGoran, Ashini Athukorala, Ashini Athukorala, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Alexandra R. McGoran, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, D. S. M. De Silva, Adil Bakir, D. S. M. De Silva, Adil Bakir, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, D. S. M. De Silva, D. S. M. De Silva, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, D. S. M. De Silva, D. S. M. De Silva, D. S. M. De Silva, Adil Bakir, D. S. M. De Silva, D. S. M. De Silva, D. S. M. De Silva, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Alexandra R. McGoran, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Alexandra R. McGoran, Alexandra R. McGoran, A.A.D. Amarathunga, A.A.D. Amarathunga, Alexandra R. McGoran, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, D. B. Sivyer, A.A.D. Amarathunga, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Alexandra R. McGoran, Adil Bakir, C. Reeve D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, Ashini Athukorala, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, Adil Bakir, B. C. G. Dias, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, D. B. Sivyer, B. C. G. Dias, C. Reeve C. Reeve C. Reeve Alexandra R. McGoran, C. Reeve Alexandra R. McGoran, C. Reeve C. Reeve W. S. Kanishka, C. Reeve

Summary

Researchers examined microplastic contamination in the gastrointestinal tracts and gills of commercial fish species from a natural lagoon environment. Microplastics were found across all species examined, with fiber morphotypes dominant and contamination levels reflecting the lagoon's proximity to human activity and plastic pollution sources.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics have emerged as a significant global environmental concern in the recent decade. The aim of this study was to elucidate microplastic contamination of commercial fish species in a natural lagoon environment. Microplastic contamination was examined in the gastrointestinal tracts and gills of 157 commercial fish from 18 species with varying feeding habits in a vital and sensitive lagoon ecosystem, which connects to the Indian ocean. Microplastics were extracted using digestion, followed by stereomicroscopic inspection using Nile Red stain, and identified via μ-FTIR analysis. Over half of studied fishes ingested microplastics (54.14%). Filaments (50%) and blue items (43%) were the most commonly ingested. Of all the fish species, Eubleekeria splendens had the highest average concentration of microplastics in GIT (1.41 ± 2.52 items/g w.w. tissues), although no statistically significant difference in amount of ingested microplastics (items/g w.w. tissues) was observed among species. The highest concentrations of inhaled microplastics were recorded in Sillago vincenti (1.38 ± 1.30 items/g w.w. tissues). The majority of the extracted microplastics (33%) belonged in the size class 500–1500 μm with rayon, polyethylene terephthalate, and polypropylene as the primary polymers. This study found no correlation between microplastic ingestion and fish species and feeding habits, but a positive correlation with fish size was observed. These findings reveal widespread microplastic contamination in edible fish, posing potential risks to commercially important species due to increasing pollution in lagoon ecosystems.

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