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Microplastics in European sea salts – An example of exposure through consumer choice and of interstudy methodological discrepancies

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2023 37 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.
Christina J. Thiele, Christina J. Thiele, Christina J. Thiele, Christina J. Thiele, Lina Restrepo Christina J. Thiele, Christina J. Thiele, Laura J. Grange, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Lina Restrepo Lina Restrepo Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Lina Restrepo Andrea E. Russell, Malcolm D. Hudson, Emily Haggett, Andrea E. Russell, Emily Haggett, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Andrea E. Russell, Malcolm D. Hudson, Lina Restrepo Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Philippa Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Malcolm D. Hudson, Andrea E. Russell, Andrea E. Russell, Andrea E. Russell, Andrea E. Russell, Lina Restrepo Lina Restrepo

Summary

Researchers analyzed 13 European sea salts and found microplastics in all of them, with industrially harvested salts containing more particles than traditionally harvested ones. They estimated that a person absorbs about 14 micrograms of microplastics annually from all salt consumption, with a quarter attributable to choosing sea salt specifically. The study also found that differences in research methods across studies make it difficult to compare microplastic levels in salt worldwide.

Microplastics are contaminants of emerging concern, not least due to their global presence in marine surface waters. Unsurprisingly, microplastics have been reported in salts harvested from numerous locations. We extracted microplastics from 13 European sea salts through 30% H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> digestion and filtration over 5-µm filters. Filters were visually inspected at magnifications to x100. A subsample of potential microplastics was subjected to Raman spectroscopy. Particle mass was estimated, and human dose exposure calculated. After blank corrections, median concentrations were 466 ± 152 microplastics kg<sup>-1</sup> ranging from 74 to 1155 items kg<sup>-1</sup>. Traditionally harvested salts contained fewer microplastics than most industrially harvested ones (t-test, p < 0.01). Approximately 14 µg of microplastics (< 12 particles) may be absorbed by the human body annually, of which a quarter may derive from a consumer choosing sea salt. We reviewed existing studies, showing that targeting different particle sizes and incomplete filtrations hinder interstudy comparison, indicating the importance of method harmonisation for future studies. Excess salt consumption is detrimental to human health; the hazardousness of ingesting microplastics on the other hand has yet to be shown. A portion of microplastics may enter sea salts through production processes rather than source materials.

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