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Toxicity of tyre wear particle leachates to marine phytoplankton

Aquatic Toxicology 2022 60 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Thomas Suurlan Page, Rodrigo Almeda, Marja Koski, Evanthia Bournaka, Torkel Gissel Nielsen

Summary

Researchers tested the acute toxicity of leachates from tyre wear particles on three marine phytoplankton species. The study found that chemical additives leaching from tyre wear particles were toxic to all three species at varying concentrations, with the cryptophyte Rhodomonas salina being the most sensitive, indicating that tyre-derived microplastics pose a risk to the base of marine food webs.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Tyre wear particles (TWP) are some of the dominant sources of microplastics in the aquatic environment. Once TWP enter aquatic systems, they can leach certain plastic additives that can be potentially toxic to biota. However, little is known about the impact of TWP lixiviates on marine phytoplankton, the base of marine food webs. This study aims to determine the acute toxic effect of leachates derived from TWP on three phytoplankton species: the cryptophyte Rhodomonas salina, the diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii and the dinoflagellate Heterocapsa steinii, using the median effect concentration (EC50) for specific growth rate as endpoint. Leachates were obtained by incubating 1 g L-1 of < 250 µm TWP in artificial seawater for 3 days. Each phytoplankton species was exposed to leachates at five different concentrations, and cell concentrations were measured every 24 h over 3 days. Leachates from TWP were toxic to marine phytoplankton. The dinoflagellate H. steinii was the most sensitive species, with 72-h EC50 of 23% leachate concentration, whereas R. salina and T. weissflogii exhibited EC50 values of 64% and 73%, respectively. Our results suggest that TWP leachates have a negative effect on phytoplankton growth, although more field data on the concentration of TWPs and their leachates is needed to fully evaluate the environmental impact of TWP.

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