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Plastic and natural inorganic microparticles do not differ in their effects on adult mussels (Mytilidae) from different geographic regions

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 30 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Thea Hamm, Jonas Barkhau, Anna-Louise Gabriel, Leo L. Gottschalck, Maria Greulich, Daphne Houiller, Uki Kawata, Lukas Novaes Tump, Abril Sanchez Leon, Paulo Vasconcelos, Vincent H.S. Yap, Corrine Almeida, Zanna Chase, Catriona L. Hurd, Jennifer L. Lavers, Masahiro Nakaoka, Gil Rilov, Martín Thiel, Jeffrey T. Wright, Mark Lenz

Summary

Researchers compared the effects of plastic microparticles and natural inorganic particles on mussels from five geographic regions, finding no significant differences between particle types, suggesting that physical particle stress rather than plastic-specific chemistry drives observed effects.

Polymers

Microplastics are ubiquitous in the marine environment and studies on their effects on benthic filter feeders at least partly revealed a negative influence. However, it is still unclear whether the effects of microplastics differ from those of natural suspended microparticles, which constitute a common stressor in many coastal environments. We present a series of experiments that compared the effects of six-week exposures of marine mussels to two types of natural particles (red clay and diatom shells) to two types of plastic particles (Polymethyl Methacrylate and Polyvinyl Chloride). Mussels of the family Mytilidae from temperate regions (Japan, Chile, Tasmania) through subtropical (Israel) to tropical environments (Cabo Verde) were exposed to concentrations of 1.5 mg/L, 15 mg/L and 150 mg/L of the respective microparticles. At the end of this period, we found significant effects of suspended particles on respiration rate, byssus production and condition index of the animals. There was no significant effect on clearance rate and survival. Surprisingly, we observed only small differences between the effects of the different types of particles, which suggests that the mussels were generally equally robust towards exposure to variable concentrations of suspended solids regardless of whether they were natural or plastic. We conclude, that microplastics and suspended solids elicit similar effects on the tested response variables, and that both types of microparticles mainly cause acute responses rather than more persistent carry-over effects.

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