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Marine & Wildlife
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Common types of microdebris affect the physiology of reef-building corals
The Science of The Total Environment2023
18 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 55
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Patrick Schubert,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Vanessa Tirpitz,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Thomas Wilke,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Katherine Plaza,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Patrick Schubert,
Katherine Plaza,
Katherine Plaza,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Katherine Plaza,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Maren Ziegler,
Jessica Reichert,
Thomas Wilke,
Thomas Wilke,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Elisabeth Wörner,
Elisabeth Wörner,
Patrick Schubert,
Patrick Schubert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Thomas Wilke,
Luisa Bösser,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Luisa Bösser,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Luisa Bösser,
Sebastian Primpke
Luisa Bösser,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Susanne Kühn,
Thomas Wilke,
Maren Ziegler,
Jessica Reichert,
Susanne Kühn,
Patrick Schubert,
Patrick Schubert,
Sebastian Primpke
Patrick Schubert,
Maren Ziegler,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Thomas Wilke,
Thomas Wilke,
Thomas Wilke,
Susanne Kühn,
Susanne Kühn,
Patrick Schubert,
Sebastian Primpke
Jessica Reichert,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Thomas Wilke,
Thomas Wilke,
Thomas Wilke,
Thomas Wilke,
Susanne Kühn,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Maren Ziegler,
Maren Ziegler,
Maren Ziegler,
Thomas Wilke,
Maren Ziegler,
Sebastian Primpke
Maren Ziegler,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Patrick Schubert,
Patrick Schubert,
Sebastian Primpke
Maren Ziegler,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Thomas Wilke,
Susanne Kühn,
Maren Ziegler,
Maren Ziegler,
Maren Ziegler,
Sebastian Primpke
Maren Ziegler,
Maren Ziegler,
Thomas Wilke,
Sebastian Primpke
Thomas Wilke,
Jessica Reichert,
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Sebastian Primpke
Summary
Researchers tested how several common types of microdebris, including microplastic fibers, fragments, and other small particles, affect reef-building corals. They found that exposure to mixed debris types caused greater stress responses in the corals than single-polymer exposures typically used in lab studies. The findings suggest that real-world microdebris pollution, which involves multiple materials at once, may be more harmful to coral reef health than previous single-material experiments have indicated.
Marine debris, particularly microdebris (< 1 mm) poses a potential threat to marine life, including reef-building corals. While previous research has mainly focused on the impact of single polymer microplastics, the effects of natural microdebris, composed of a mixture of materials, have not been explored. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the effects of different microdebris, originating from major sources of pollution, on reef-building corals. For this, we exposed two scleractinian coral species, Pocillopora verrucosa and Stylophora pistillata, known to frequently ingest microplastics, to four types of microdebris in an 8-week laboratory experiment: fragmented environmental plastic debris, artificial fibers from clothing, residues from the automobile sector consisting of tire wear, brake abrasion, and varnish flakes, a single polymer microplastic treatment consisting of polyethylene particles, and a microdebris-free control treatment. Specifically, we (I) compared the effects of the different microdebris on coral growth, necrosis, and photosynthesis, (II) investigated the difference between the microdebris mixtures and the exposure to the single polymer treatment, and (III) identified potential mechanisms causing species-specific effects by contrasting the feeding responses of the two coral species on microdebris and natural food. We show that the fibers and tire wear had the strongest effects on coral physiology, with P. verrucosa being more affected than S. pistillata. Both species showed increased volume growth in response to the microdebris treatments, accompanied by decreased calcification in P. verrucosa. Photosynthetic efficiency of the symbionts was enhanced in both species. The species-specific physiological responses might be attributed to feeding reactions, with P. verrucosa responding significantly more often to microdebris than S. pistillata. These findings highlight the effect of different microdebris on coral physiology and the need for future studies to use particle mixtures to better mimic naturally occurring microdebris and assess its effect on corals in more detail.