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Polyethylene microplastics and substrate availability can affect emergence responses of the freshwater insect Chironomus sancticaroli

Ecotoxicology 2022 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Mayara Caroline Felipe, Gleyson B. Castro, Gleyson B. Castro, Mayara Caroline Felipe, Gleyson B. Castro, Gleyson B. Castro, Gleyson B. Castro, Mayara Caroline Felipe, Gleyson B. Castro, Aline Christine Bernegossi, Aline Christine Bernegossi, Aline Christine Bernegossi, Aline Christine Bernegossi, Aline Christine Bernegossi, Gleyson B. Castro, Aline Christine Bernegossi, Allan Pretti Ogura, Mayara Caroline Felipe, Mayara Caroline Felipe, Gleyson B. Castro, Juliano José Corbi Juliano José Corbi Juliano José Corbi Juliano José Corbi Mayara Caroline Felipe, Mayara Caroline Felipe, Allan Pretti Ogura, Juliano José Corbi Mara R. de Lima e Silva, Juliano José Corbi Juliano José Corbi Juliano José Corbi Juliano José Corbi

Summary

Laboratory experiments exposed larvae of the freshwater insect Chironomus sancticaroli to polyethylene microplastics combined with varying substrate availability, finding that microplastic exposure reduced adult emergence rates and that substrate conditions modified the severity of the effect. The study is among the first to examine microplastic impacts on the emergence stage of tropical freshwater insects.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Pollution caused by polyethylene microplastics (MP) has been reported for aquatic environments worldwide. However, despite recurrent research for several aquatic organisms, the effects of MP on the emergence stage of freshwater insects from tropical environments are little known. This study is the first to assess the emergence of the Brazilian native species Chironomus sancticaroli Strixino & Strixino, 1981 when exposed to primary polyethylene microplastics (size 40-48 µm). We performed two exposure scenarios, with a substrate (standard assays) and without substrate (as a stressful experience), and recorded emergence responses. The MP did not affect the species' emergence rate, but these rates were statistically different for the standard and stressful exposure scenarios. In bioassays without substrate, the high concentrations of MP caused anticipation of the insect's emergence (5-6 days). On the other hand, female emergence time was longer than males in standard bioassays. The substrate absence caused a slight increase in the left female wing's length and the potential female fecundity. These findings suggest that the polyethylene microplastics and substrate availability can affect the emergence dynamics of the tropical insect C. sancticaroli.

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