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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

Low abundance of microplastics in commercially caught fish across southern Australia

Environmental Pollution 2021 79 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Bronwyn M. Gillanders Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Natalie Dowsett, Nina Wootton, Nina Wootton, Bronwyn M. Gillanders Bronwyn M. Gillanders Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Patrick Reis‐Santos, Bronwyn M. Gillanders Bronwyn M. Gillanders Alison Turnbull, Bronwyn M. Gillanders Alison Turnbull, Bronwyn M. Gillanders Bronwyn M. Gillanders Bronwyn M. Gillanders Bronwyn M. Gillanders Bronwyn M. Gillanders Patrick Reis‐Santos, Bronwyn M. Gillanders

Summary

Researchers examined microplastic contamination in nine commercially important fish species purchased from seafood markets across 4,000 km of southern Australia. They found that about 35.5% of fish had at least one microplastic particle in their gastrointestinal tract, with an average load of 0.94 pieces per fish, and polyolefin was the dominant polymer type. While microplastic ingestion was widespread across species and locations, the levels were lower than those reported in similar global studies.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution has increased significantly in the past decades and is now a major global environmental issue. Plastic objects enter the ocean and are broken down into smaller pieces, while wastewater and runoff also carry microplastics (plastics <5 mm) into the ocean. Plastic has been found in over 700 different species of marine wildlife but little research has examined fish sold for human consumption. We determined the microplastic abundance in nine commercially important, wild-caught fish species purchased from seafood markets across 4000 km of Australia (Western Australia, South Australia, Victoria, Tasmania, New South Wales). For microplastic quantification, fish gastro-intestinal tracts were chemically digested and the amount and type of microplastic identified under a microscope and Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. Across all states, an average of 35.5% of fish samples had at least one piece of microplastic in their gastro-intestinal tract. South Australia had the highest percentage of fish with plastic (49%) and Tasmania the lowest (20%). The average microplastic load was 0.94 piece per fish but ranged from 0 to 17 pieces, with polyolefin identified as the dominant polymer group. Overall, the ingestion of microplastic was widespread across species, locations, diets and habitat niches of fish species investigated, but the average plastic ingestion was less than other similar global studies. This study provides novel insights on the use of fish species from seafood markets to assess environmental contamination by microplastic, as well as an important perspective of the potential for microplastic contamination to enter the human food chain.

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