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Presence of Microplastics in Cronius Ruber Species

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2022
Sofía Huelbes Muñoz, María Milagrosa Gomez Cabrera, Ico Martínez, Raül Triay‐Portella, Alicia Herrera Ulibarri

Summary

Researchers examined microplastic content in the stomach contents of Cronius ruber, an invasive crab species in Mediterranean waters, finding plastic particles — primarily fibers — in the animals. The presence of microplastics in invasive crab species adds to the evidence that plastic ingestion is widespread across marine crustaceans in contaminated coastal waters.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic pollution in the ocean is a growing problem. It affects the entire ecosystem and, therefore, the species that inhabit it. Plastics can be filtered or ingested by organisms, entering, and negatively affecting individuals. One of the populations affected are crustaceans. In previous studies, fibers have been found mainly in the stomach contents of these animals (Brennecke et al., 2015; Villagran et al., 2020; Waite et al., 2018), although other types such as pellets have also been found. In this study we determined the amount of microplastics found in the stomach contents of Cronius ruber (Lamarck,1818), an invasive species, of the family Portunidae, which has recently appeared in the Canary Islands with a great capacity for predation and expansion (González et al., 2017). This is the first study focused on microplastic contamination in this specie. Sixty-three samples from different points of the island of Gran Canaria (Agaete, Anfi del Mar, El Puertillo and La Laja), were studied. Of all the samples, 52% (n=63) were found to be contaminated. This contamination produced mostly by plastic fibers, has been more noticeable in El Puertillo, where high prevalence of plastic ingestion was detected detected (58% of the samples, n=33). In contrast to the samples taken from Agaete, where 40% of the individuals had plastic in their stomachs (n=22), the lowest percentage found, being from these two points where most of the samples were obtained. These data corroborate the negative impact of microplastic ingestion caused by pollution on the Cronius ruber species. Also see: https://micro2022.sciencesconf.org/426394/document

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