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Novel microplastic dosing approach of shellfish prey reveals highly efficient egestion rates by predatory crabs under environmentally realistic feeding scenarios

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sarah M. Davis, Coleen C. Suckling Coleen C. Suckling Sarah M. Davis, Sarah M. Davis, Coleen C. Suckling Sarah M. Davis, Lindsey Reimels, Lindsey Reimels, Coleen C. Suckling Sarah M. Davis, Andrew J. Davies, Andrew J. Davies, Kelton W. McMahon, Andrew J. Davies, Andrew J. Davies, Kelton W. McMahon, Coleen C. Suckling Coleen C. Suckling Andrew J. Davies, Kelton W. McMahon, Kelton W. McMahon, Coleen C. Suckling Coleen C. Suckling Coleen C. Suckling

Summary

Researchers developed a novel method for dosing shellfish prey with microplastics under environmentally realistic conditions and then fed the contaminated prey to predatory crabs. They found that the crabs egested microplastic fibers with high efficiency, suggesting limited tissue accumulation through trophic transfer under these conditions. The study highlights the importance of using realistic exposure methods when assessing microplastic transfer through marine food webs.

The marine benthos is a sink for microplastic (MP) pollution, placing benthic organisms like filter-feeding bivalves at high exposure risk. Predatory crabs that consume bivalve prey may further accumulate MPs via trophic transfer, possibly facilitating tissue accumulation of ingested MPs. However, prior studies often lack methodology with environmental realism in dose, particle characteristics, and prey handling. We developed a novel dosing method to quantitatively inject polyester (PES) microfibers into intact Eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) to simulate natural predation. Oysters were dosed with environmentally realistic MP concentrations (103 ± 15 PES microfibers - 662 μm length, 16 μm width; representative of high pollution scenarios) to evaluate: (1) MP retention in Jonah crab (Cancer borealis) tissues following a single oyster feeding event, and (2) MP accumulation following repeated oyster feeding events. Crabs ingested 70 % of MPs within a single dosed oyster, and 99 % of those ingested MPs were egested within 24 hrs. Approximately 1 % of MPs were retained by gills from the ambient water during messy predation behavior. We identified limited evidence of MP bioaccumulation in crab stomachs or gills after single or multiple oyster consumption events, likely due to rapid egestion, and limited evidence of MP translocation to internal tissues (reproductive, hepatopancreas, hemolymph), suggesting size-dependent translocation thresholds. In contrast, field-collected crabs had more MPs in gills (5.2 ± 1.1) and reproductive tissues (3.8 ± 1.5) than in stomachs (2.2 ± 0.8) or hepatopancreas (0.6 ± 0.6), highlighting discrepancies between laboratory and field. These findings underscore the value of realistic exposure approaches to better understand MP trophic transfer in marine food webs.

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