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Assessing the toxicity of polystyrene beads and silica particles on the microconsumer Brachionus calyciflorus at different timescales

Frontiers in Environmental Science 2022 4 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.
Claudia Drago Claudia Drago Julia Pawlak, Claudia Drago Claudia Drago Dominique C. Noetzel, Claudia Drago Claudia Drago Julia Pawlak, Dominique C. Noetzel, Guntram Weithoff, Claudia Drago Guntram Weithoff, Claudia Drago Guntram Weithoff, Claudia Drago

Summary

Researchers assessed the toxicity of polystyrene microbeads and silica particles to the freshwater rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus at multiple timescales, finding that both particle types caused dose-dependent toxic effects that evolved differently over short-term and long-term exposure periods.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Environmental pollution by microplastics has become a severe problem in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and, according to actual prognoses, problems will further increase in the future. Therefore, assessing and quantifying the risk for the biota is crucial. Standardized short-term toxicological procedures as well as methods quantifying potential toxic effects over the whole life span of an animal are required. We studied the effect of the microplastic polystyrene on the survival and reproduction of a common freshwater invertebrate, the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus , at different timescales. We used pristine polystyrene spheres of 1, 3, and 6 µm diameter and fed them to the animals together with food algae in different ratios ranging from 0 to 50% nonfood particles. As a particle control, we used silica to distinguish between a pure particle effect and a plastic effect. After 24 h, no toxic effect was found, neither with polystyrene nor with silica. After 96 h, a toxic effect was detectable for both particle types. The size of the particles played a negligible role. Studying the long-term effect by using life table experiments, we found a reduced reproduction when the animals were fed with 3 µm spheres together with similar-sized food algae. We conclude that the fitness reduction is mainly driven by the dilution of food by the nonfood particles rather than by a direct toxic effect.

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