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Accumulation, depuration, and potential effects of environmentally representative microplastics towards Daphnia magna

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Andrew Barrick, Alison J. Boardwine, Tham C. Hoang

Summary

Researchers created environmentally realistic microplastics by grinding common consumer products and tested their effects on Daphnia magna, a small freshwater organism widely used in toxicity studies. The organisms accumulated the microplastics and showed some ability to clear them over time, but the realistic microplastics caused different effects than the pristine laboratory plastics typically used in research. This suggests that many existing studies may underestimate the true environmental risk of microplastics.

Polymers
Models

Microplastic risk assessment often characterizes primary plastics, plastics intentionally manufactured at the micro- and nanoscale, or plastics collected within the natural environment, which often lack repeatability and the volume necessary for reliable hazard characterization. There is limited understanding of how environmentally representative plastics prepared at the microscale impact aquatic organisms. The aim of the present study was to create environmentally representative microplastics and characterize their toxicokinetics and hazards. Plastic cups and forks were micronized to <120 μm particles and Daphnia magna were exposed for 48 h at concentrations ranging from 0.01 mg/L to 100 mg/L. Uptake and depuration experiments were conducted at the highest concentration where accumulation was confirmed. Raman spectroscopy identified that both plastics were polystyrene and had similar size distributions. Microplastics were not acutely toxic but accumulated and rapidly depurated. Toxicokinetics demonstrated that cup MPs were consumed at higher rates than fork MPs despite similar physical characteristics. Daphnia magna preferentially selected smaller particles from the heterogenous suspensions. Future research will need to further explore the relationship between physicochemical properties, particularly size, and ecotoxicity. The study focused on mortality as the primary hazard endpoint. However alternative, sublethal biomarkers may be more appropriate in describing the effects of microplastic exposure.

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