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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Modeling the differential functional responses and selectivity of a marine copepod to nano/microplastics in mixture

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 4 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.
Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Zipei Dong, Zipei Dong, Wen‐Xiong Wang Zipei Dong, Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Zipei Dong, Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang Wen‐Xiong Wang

Summary

This study modeled how the marine copepod Parvocalanus crassirostris selects between food and nano/microplastics of different sizes in mixed feeding scenarios, using bioenergetic modeling. The copepod showed size-dependent selectivity, preferentially ingesting certain particle size classes over others, with implications for predicting nano- and microplastic accumulation in zooplankton across naturally heterogeneous marine particle environments.

Nano- and microplastics (NMPs) pollution is widespread in the oceans, posing potential risks to marine species. This study examined the accumulation capacity and selectivity potentials of NMPs by a marine copepod Parvocalanus crassirostris under different food mixtures by modeling the combined biokinetic and functional response. We investigated two sizes of NMPs (200 nm and 5 µm) across a concentration gradient (0 - 5000 µg/L) and varying diatom abundances (0, 10, 10 cells/mL). Fluorescence imaging and quantification revealed that P. crassirostris actively ingested NMPs at low concentration. Accumulation increased with NMPs concentration but eventually saturated due to gut capacity limits, following a Holling type II functional response (i.e., hyperbolic curve). Our novel functional response model estimated the key parameters and demonstrated that the maximum accumulation reached 5.3 % of dry weight with averaged half-saturation constants of 229 µg/L. The size of NMPs did not significantly affect the total accumulation or satiety levels. The presence of diatoms influenced the feeding selectivity and decreased the microplastic accumulation by 73 % at 10 cells/mL, while facilitating nanoplastic accumulation by 81 % at 10 cells/mL. This study enhanced our understanding of NMPs bioavailability and environmental fate in marine ecosystems.

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