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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Polystyrene Microparticles and the Functional Traits of Invertebrates: A Case Study on Freshwater Shrimp Neocardina heteropoda

Fishes 2022 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tomáš Mackuľak, Karel Douda, Noemi Belišová, Noemi Belišová, Jozef Kučera, Karel Douda, Noemi Belišová, Noemi Belišová, Tomáš Mackuľak, Pavel Horký Noemi Belišová, Felipe Escobar‐Calderón, Noemi Belišová, Pavel Horký Tomáš Mackuľak, Karel Douda, Tomáš Mackuľak, Tomáš Mackuľak, Tomáš Mackuľak, Pavel Horký Dmitrij Bondarev, Jozef Ryba, Jozef Ryba, Dmitrij Bondarev, Karel Douda, Ondřej Slavík, Ondřej Slavík, Karel Douda, Dmitrij Bondarev, Dmitrij Bondarev, Michal Tamáš, Tomáš Mackuľak, Dmitrij Bondarev, Michal Tamáš, Ondřej Slavík, Felipe Escobar‐Calderón, Michal Tamáš, Michal Tamáš, Tomáš Mackuľak, Tomáš Mackuľak, Felipe Escobar‐Calderón, Tomáš Mackuľak, Tomáš Mackuľak, Pavel Horký

Summary

Researchers exposed freshwater shrimp to polystyrene microplastics and found measurable changes in behavioral and physiological functional traits, contributing evidence that microplastic pollution poses risks to freshwater invertebrate communities beyond the marine environments typically studied.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The excessive worldwide production of plastic materials results in omnipresent microplastic pollution. Scientific studies dealing with the impacts of microplastics on aquatic ecosystems focus mainly on the marine environment, documenting the effect on the functional traits of various organisms. Polystyrene, one of the most commonly used plastics, has become a widely used model in this respect. In our study, freshwater shrimps (Neocardina heteropoda) were exposed to virgin polystyrene particles (size 0.5 mm; nominal concentration 8 mgL−1), and their behavioral and physiological responses were compared to control shrimp. The exposed shrimps exhibited modified activity patterns (greater speeds, accelerations and distances moved), accompanied by a lowered standard metabolic rate (SMR). The observed effects differed in their progression from the 7th to 14th day of exposure, from undetectable changes (distance, SMR) to significant differences (speed, acceleration). Significant differences were also detected in the behavioral syndromes expressed by the exposed and controlled shrimps, indicating that the microplastics influence not only the particular traits, but also their functional relationships. As such, our study contributes to the integration of behavioral ecotoxicology in risk assessment, documenting the adverse performance of freshwater invertebrates exposed to microplastics with the potential to transpose the problem to higher levels of the food web.

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