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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. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Fish personality affects their exposure to microplastics

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2022 39 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.
Chenxi Wu Yuling Chen, Yuling Chen, Yuling Chen, Yuling Chen, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Yuling Chen, Yuling Chen, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Weiwei Li, Ming Duan, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Lingli Xiang, Lingli Xiang, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Ming Duan, Xiang-Yuan Mi, Xiang-Yuan Mi, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Ming Duan, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Ming Duan, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Ming Duan, Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu Chenxi Wu

Summary

Researchers found that fish personality traits, specifically boldness, significantly affect microplastic exposure in zebrafish, with bolder individuals ingesting more microplastics than shyer ones, suggesting behavioral differences influence contamination risk in wild fish populations.

Microplastics (MPs) have been found in nearly half of the fish samples collected from the field worldwide. There are feeding behavior differences caused by animal personality among fish individuals. However, how personality affects the exposure of fish to microplastics is unclear. In this study, adult zebrafish were used as a model to study the effects of fish personality (boldness) on MPs exposure. Experiment showed that zebrafish captured MPs actively when MPs were added to the system but spit part of the MPs out after capturing. Bold zebrafish had higher feeding activities, captured MPs more frequently and swallowed more MPs than shy zebrafish. Zebrafish ingested brine shrimp preferentially when both brine shrimp and MPs were provided at the same time, and less MPs were swallowed in co-ingestion situation. Spearman correlation analysis indicated that there is a significantly positive correlation between boldness and feeding MPs frequency. Results of this work demonstrate that zebrafish mistake MPs as food and capture them actively but can discriminate MPs as inedible substances after ingestion and spit part of the MPs out. Bold zebrafish have a higher MP exposure burden than shy zebrafish due to their difference in feeding behaviors. The influence of fish personality needs to be considered for future toxicity studies and risk assessment of fish exposed to MPs.

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