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First record of plastic ingestion by a freshwater stingray

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Paulo Arthur A. Trindade, Lucio Brabo, Ryan Andrades, Valter M. Azevedo‐Santos, Marcelo Ândrade, Laura Candore, Serena Benedetta Cabigliera, David Chelazzi, Alessandra Cincinelli, Alessandra Cincinelli, Carson A. Jeffres, Tommaso Giarrizzo

Summary

Microplastics were documented for the first time in the digestive tract of the freshwater white-blotched river stingray in the Xingu River, Amazon, with 66.6% of 24 individuals containing plastic particles (81 total items), dominated by blue fibres and including 8 polymer types confirmed by 2D FTIR imaging.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

The abundance and dispersion of plastic particles in aquatic ecosystems has become pervasive resulting in the incorporation of these materials into food webs. Here we describe the first record of plastic ingestion by the freshwater white-blotched river stingray Potamotrygon leopoldi (Potamotrygonidae), an endemic and threatened species in the Xingu River, Amazon basin. Potamotrygonidae stingrays inhabit exclusively Neotropical rivers, occupying rocky substrate habitats and feeding mainly on benthic macroinvertebrates. The gastrointestinal tract of 24 stingrays were analyzed, 16 (66.6 %) of which contained plastic particles. In total, 81 plastic particles were recorded and consisted of microplastics (< 5 mm, n = 57) and mesoplastics (5-25 mm, n = 24). The plastic particles found were classified into fibers (64.2 %, n = 52) and fragments (35.8 %, n = 29). The predominant color was blue (33.3 %, n = 27), followed by yellow (18.5 %, n = 15), white (14.8 %, n = 12), black (13.6 %, n = 11), green (6.2 %, n = 5), transparent (4.9 %, n = 4), pink, grey and brown (2.5 %, n = 2, each) and orange (1.2 %, n = 1). No significant correlation was observed between the number of plastic particles and the body size. Eight types of polymers were identified in the plastic particles analyzed using 2D FTIR Imaging. The most frequent polymer was artificial cellulose fiber. This is the first report of plastic ingestion by freshwater elasmobranchs in the world. Plastic waste has become an emerging problem in aquatic ecosystems globally and our results provide an important datapoint for freshwater stingrays in the Neotropics.

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