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Potential microplastics impacts on African fishing resources

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 18 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.
Paula Masiá, Juan L. Mateo, Andrés Arias, M. Bartolomé, Carmen Sánchez Blanco, Karim Erzini, François Le Loc’h, Jean Hervé Mve Beh, Deborah M. Power, Noemí Rodríguez, Gauthier Schaal, Gonzalo Machado‐Schiaffino, Eva García‐Vázquez

Summary

This review assessed how microplastic pollution threatens African fishing resources, highlighting that inadequate waste management in coastal African nations accelerates plastic inputs and that fish species critical for food security show measurable microplastic ingestion, with risks compounded by the co-transport of persistent organic pollutants.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastic (MP) pollution is increasing worldwide and affecting aquatic fauna in different ways, which endangers current aquatic resources in a still unknown extent. MP-induced threats to marine fauna are critical for developing countries, where waste treatment may be not optimal and coastal communities rely heavily on marine resources for dietary protein. In this study, we assess the importance of MP pollution for African fishing resources. A new meta-database was created from published studies, containing 156 samples with more than 6200 individuals analysed for microplastic content from African and adjacent waters. A combination of research landscape analysis and rank analysis served to identify main research targets and to determine regional fishing resources especially affected by MP. A network of relevant terms showed fish health as a concern in Mediterranean waters, environmental pollution in freshwater and an emphasis on plastic items in South Africa. MP contents in fishing resources from Nile countries and the Gulf of Guinea, followed by Tunisia, are significantly higher than in other regions. Some of the most exploited species are among the most polluted ones, highlighting the threat of MP pollution in valuable but already compromised African fishing resources. Large geographic gaps with almost absent data about MP in aquatic fauna were revealed, especially in freshwater and in East African coasts. These results emphasize the importance of increasing the coverage of MP pollution in African fishing resources, and improving plastic waste management in the continent.

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