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Contamination from microplastics and other anthropogenic particles in the digestive tracts of the commercial species Engraulis encrasicolus and Sardina pilchardus

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 25 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Enrique González‐Ortegón, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, María Pilar Yeste, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, María Pilar Yeste, Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández Fernando Ramos, Fernando Ramos, Fernando Ramos, Fernando Ramos, Fernando Ramos, Daniel González‐Fernández María Pilar Yeste, Fernando Ramos, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Daniel González‐Fernández Daniel González‐Fernández María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, Fernando Ramos, Fernando Ramos, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Marta Sendra, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Enrique González‐Ortegón, Miguel Jorge Sánchez-Guerrero-Hernández, Marta Sendra, María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, Enrique González‐Ortegón, María Pilar Yeste, Daniel González‐Fernández Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, María Pilar Yeste, Marta Sendra, Daniel González‐Fernández

Summary

Researchers examined microplastic and anthropogenic particle contamination in the digestive tracts of European anchovies and sardines from Spanish waters, finding widespread ingestion of synthetic particles in these commercially important fish species.

Fragments of microplastics (<5 mm) found in commercial species of fish, crustaceans, and bivalves, are an issue of global concern. The bioaccumulation of microplastics and other anthropogenic particles in different levels of the food web may provoke unwanted impacts on marine ecosystems and cause pernicious effects on human health. Here, we study the presence of anthropogenic particles and the fraction of microplastics in the target organs of two representative commercial fish species in Spain; the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) and the European pilchard (Sardina pilchardus). The individuals were sampled along the continental shelf of the Gulf of Cádiz, from the Bay of Cádiz to Cape Santa Maria. The isolation of the microplastics (MPs) was carried out with a complete alkaline-oxidant organic digestion (KOH-H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) of the digestive tract, including both the contents ingested and the muscle tissues. Anthropogenic particles were found in all individuals of both species with an average of 8.94 ± 5.11 items·ind<sup>-1</sup>. Fibres made up 93 % of the items while fragments and films were represented by the remaining 7 %. The average size of the anthropogenic particles was 0.89 ± 0.82 mm. In addition to the fragment and film particles identified as microplastics, 29 % of the fibres were estimated to be microplastics by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis. The main polymer found in both species was nylon. No significant correlation was found between the abundance and size of anthropogenic particles ingested and individual size or other body variables. The analysis of similarities (ANOSIM) and the distanced-based multiple linear regression model showed a high homogeneity in anthropogenic particle contamination in both species throughout the study area along the continental shelf of the Gulf of Cádiz.

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