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Sediment matters as a route of microplastic exposure: A call for more research on the benthic compartment

Frontiers in Marine Science 2023 18 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Asta Hooge, Asta Hooge, Agathe Bour, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Agathe Bour, Monica Hamann Sandgaard Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Amalie Thit, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Agathe Bour, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Monica Hamann Sandgaard Monica Hamann Sandgaard Monica Hamann Sandgaard Annemette Palmqvist, Annemette Palmqvist, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Henriette Selck, Kristian Syberg, Henriette Selck, Monica Hamann Sandgaard Sara Nicoline Grønlund, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Asta Hooge, Annemette Palmqvist, Amalie Thit, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Asta Hooge, Monica Hamann Sandgaard Annemette Palmqvist, Annemette Palmqvist, Annemette Palmqvist, Henriette Selck, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Henriette Selck, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Amalie Thit, Kristian Syberg, Asta Hooge, Asta Hooge, Asta Hooge, Asta Hooge, Kristian Syberg, Asta Hooge, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Asta Hooge, Kristian Syberg, Asta Hooge, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Annemette Palmqvist, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Kristian Syberg, Amalie Thit, Amalie Thit, Kristian Syberg, Agathe Bour, Asta Hooge, Monica Hamann Sandgaard

Summary

Researchers conducted a systematic review highlighting that most microplastic studies focus on pelagic species in water-only exposures, despite evidence that sediment acts as a major sink for marine microplastics. The study calls for more research on sediment as an important exposure pathway for benthic invertebrates, recommending ecologically relevant concentrations and durations in future experiments.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) are ubiquitous in the marine environment. Here, most MPs are expected to sink, either due to polymer density or environmental processes, such as biofouling, leading to sediment being proposed to act as a final sink for marine MPs. There is a discrepancy between the anticipated accumulation of MPs in the sediment compartment and the MP experiments conducted, since most MP effect studies have been conducted with pelagic species using water-only exposures. Here we address fundamental questions in relation to MP pollution to close the knowledge gap related hereto. A systematic literature search was performed to address these questions. We found that benthic invertebrates ingest MPs and that, even though these organisms evolutionary are adapted to handle particles, adverse effects may be observed upon ingestion of MPs. The analysis further revealed that there is a major knowledge gap on the impacts of sediment-associated MPs in marine, benthic invertebrates. To facilitate further and structured research within this topic, we recommend more studies with emphasis on the sediment as an important exposure pathway, and to focus on sediment-associated MP effects on benthic invertebrates. We recommend studies with ecological relevant exposure concentrations and ecological relevant exposure durations with emphasis on impacts on population- and community-level to reduce the knowledge gap within this central area of MP pollution research.

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