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Microplastics contamination in two species of gobies and their estuarine habitat of Indian Sundarbans

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2023 23 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.
Sourav Das, Sourav Das, Nilanjan Hari Chatterjee, Nilanjan Hari Chatterjee, Sourav Das, Sumit Manna, Sourav Das, Nilanjan Hari Chatterjee, Nilanjan Hari Chatterjee, Abhishek Ray, Sourav Das, Sajal Ray Sajal Ray Nabakumar Rana, Mitali Ray, Aritra Banerjee, Mitali Ray, Sajal Ray Sajal Ray Sajal Ray

Summary

This study estimated microplastic abundance in two goby species -- Boddart's goggle-eye mudskipper and Rubicundus eelgoby -- and their estuarine habitat in the Indian Sundarbans, finding heterogeneous microplastic contamination in both fish and the surrounding environment. The Sundarbans, a Ramsar-listed wetland, showed significant microplastic pollution.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Sundarbans, a Ramsar site of India is contaminated with heterogeneous microplastic wastes. Boddart's goggle eye mudskipper and Rubicundus eelgoby, were common gobies of Sundarbans estuary which accumulated microplastics during their normal biological activities. We estimated the abundance of microplastics in water, sediment; skin, gills, bucco-opercular cavity and gastrointestinal tract of these two goby fishes. Microplastic load estimated in gobies were 0.84 and 2.62 particles per fish species with a dominance of transparent, fibrous microplastics with 100-300 μm in length. ATR-FTIR and Raman spectroscopy revealed polyethylene as prevalent polymer. Surface degradations and adsorption of contaminants on microplastic surface were investigated by SEM-EDX analysis. Presence of hazardous polymers influenced high polymer hazard index and potential ecological risk index which indicated acute environmental threat to Sundarbans estuary and its resident organisms. Current study will provide a new information base on the abundance of microplastics and its ecological hazard in this biosphere reserve.

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