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Changes in the wing shape and size in fruit flies exposed to micro and nanoplastics

Chemosphere 2024 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Rachel M. Sorensen, Dimitrija Savić‐Zdravković, Boris Jovanović

Summary

Researchers exposed fruit flies to polystyrene nano- and microplastics during development and then measured changes in wing shape and size using geometric morphometrics. They found that exposed flies had altered wing dimensions compared to controls, with effects varying between males and females. The study demonstrates that plastic particle exposure during early development can produce measurable physical changes in organisms.

Polymers

Geometric morphometrics analysis (GMA) is a well-known technique to identify minute changes in Drosophila wings. This study aimed to determine potential changes in Drosophila wings shape and size after exposure to polystyrene nanoplastics (NPs) (50 nm) and microplastics (MPs) (1 μm). Flies were exposed from eggs to pupal eclosion and analyzed using GMA. Results revealed a difference in shape and size between male and female wings, as expected, due to sexual dimorphism. Therefore, wings were analyzed by sex. Wings of MPs and NPs treated females were elongated compared to controls and had a constriction of the wing joint. Additionally, MPs treated female flies had the most dissimilar shape compared to controls. In male flies, NPs flies had smaller wings compared to MPs and control flies. Compared to control, NPs wings of males were shrunken at the joint and in the entire proximal region of the wing. However, male MPs wings had a narrower anal region and were slightly elongated. These results reveal that wing shape and size can change in a different way based on the sex of the flies and size of plastic particles that larvae interacted with. All the changes in the wings occurred only within the normally allowed wing variation and treatment with NPs/MPs did not cause development of the aberrant phenotypes. Results can pave the way for further understanding of how MPs and NPs can alter phenotypes of flies.

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