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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Effects of cooking methods on microplastics in dried shellfish

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lei Su, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Jiana Li, Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Liqi Zhang, Liqi Zhang, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Jiana Li, Khalida Jabeen, Liqi Zhang, Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Zhenglu Wang, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Xiaolong Dang, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Xiaolong Dang, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Lei Su, Lei Su, Zhenglu Wang, Lei Su, Lei Su, Jiana Li, Khalida Jabeen, Zhenglu Wang, Khalida Jabeen, Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Khalida Jabeen Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Lei Su, Zhenglu Wang, Lei Su, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Zhenglu Wang, Jiana Li, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen Khalida Jabeen Khalida Jabeen Zhenglu Wang, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Khalida Jabeen Hao Wang, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen Jiana Li, Lei Su, Lei Su, Zhenglu Wang, Lei Su, Jiana Li, Jiana Li, Khalida Jabeen Khalida Jabeen Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen, Lei Su, Khalida Jabeen, Khalida Jabeen Jiana Li, Lei Su, Jiana Li, Khalida Jabeen

Summary

Researchers examined how different cooking methods affect microplastic levels in dried shellfish, finding that certain preparation techniques altered the abundance and characteristics of microplastics present, with implications for human dietary exposure.

Many studies have reported the occurrence of microplastics in live shellfish intended for human consumption. However, far fewer studies have been conducted on dried shellfish from supermarkets or fishery markets. In this study, the characteristics of microplastics in six kinds of dried shellfish products following different cooking treatments were investigated. Dietary exposure to microplastics in dried shellfish was estimated using the consumption rate of seafood among different age groups. Microplastics were detected in all the uncooked, dried shellfish products, ranging from 0.3 to 4.2 items/g. Fibres accounted for more than 80% of microplastics in razor clams, winkles, and scallops. The proportion of microplastics smaller than 1 mm in size ranged from 57.1% to 89.7% of the total microplastics found in dried shellfish. The polymer types included polyethylene terephthalate (PET), rayon, polyester, nylon, polypropylene (PP), cellophane (CP), and polyethylene (PE). Principal component analysis (PCA) showed that the sizes and shapes of microplastics in scallops were more susceptible to alteration by different cooking methods. Steaming and frying significantly reduced the abundance of microplastics in razor clams. In addition, significantly fewer microplastics were found in scallop products after boiling and steaming than were found in fried scallop products. The estimated dietary intake of microplastics for infants was the highest among the age groups considered (3.05 items/kg(bw)/day). Accordingly, frying was suggested for cooking mussels, boiling for clams and winkles, and steaming for scallops. Combining risks from ingesting plastics and plastic additives, steaming is suggested as the best method to cook shellfish.

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