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Environmental Sources
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Microplastic pollution in perch (Perca fluviatilis, Linnaeus 1758) from Italian south-alpine lakes
Environmental Pollution2021
49 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 50
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Silvia Galafassi,
Silvia Galafassi,
Silvia Galafassi,
Loris Pietrelli,
Silvia Galafassi,
Loris Pietrelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Silvia Galafassi,
Loris Pietrelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Silvia Galafassi,
Maria Sighicelli,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Loris Pietrelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Silvia Galafassi,
Maria Sighicelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Loris Pietrelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Silvia Galafassi,
Alessandro Cau,
Silvia Galafassi,
Silvia Galafassi,
Loris Pietrelli,
Silvia Galafassi,
Alessandro Cau,
Maria Sighicelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Raymond Gillibert,
Pietro Volta
Pietro Volta
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Pietro Volta
Pietro Volta
Roberta Bettinetti,
Maria Sighicelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Maria Sighicelli,
Silvia Galafassi,
Silvia Galafassi,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Silvia Galafassi,
Loris Pietrelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Alessandro Cau,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Loris Pietrelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Silvia Galafassi,
Silvia Galafassi,
Maria Sighicelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Maria Sighicelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Alessandro Cau,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Pietro Volta
Pietro Volta
Roberta Bettinetti,
Silvia Galafassi,
Maria Eleonora Temperini,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Alessandro Cau,
Pietro Volta
Roberta Bettinetti,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Loris Pietrelli,
Loris Pietrelli,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Pietro Volta
Pietro Volta
Pietro Volta
Pietro Volta
Raymond Gillibert,
Antonio Pusceddu,
Pietro Volta
Silvia Galafassi,
Roberta Bettinetti,
Alessandro Cau,
Michele Ortolani,
Loris Pietrelli,
Silvia Galafassi,
Loris Pietrelli,
Pietro Volta
Loris Pietrelli,
Alessandro Cau,
Silvia Zaupa,
Pietro Volta
Silvia Zaupa,
Alessandro Cau,
Silvia Galafassi,
Silvia Galafassi,
Pietro Volta
Summary
Researchers examined microplastic ingestion in European perch (Perca fluviatilis) from four Italian alpine lakes, finding MPs in the gastrointestinal tracts of all sampled fish with fibers as the dominant type and higher ingestion rates in fish from more urbanized lake catchments.
Microplastic particles (MPs) contamination of aquatic environments has raised a growing concern in recent decades because of their numerous potential toxicological effects. Although fish are among the most studied aquatic organisms, reports on MPs ingestion in freshwater environments are still scarce. Thus, there is still much to study to understand the uptake mechanisms, their potential accumulation among the food webs and their ecotoxicological effects. Here, MPs presence in the digestive system of one of the most widespread and commercially exploited freshwater fish, the perch (Perca fluviatilis, Linnaeus 1758), was investigated in four different south-alpine lakes, to assess the extent of ingestion and evaluate its relation to the body health condition. A total of 80 perch specimen have been sampled from the Italian lakes Como, Garda, Maggiore and Orta. Microplastic particles occurred in 86% of the analysed specimens, with average values ranging from 1.24 ± 1.04 MPs fish in L. Como to 5.59 ± 2.61 MPs fish in L. Garda. The isolated particles were mainly fragments, except in L. Como where films were more abundant. The most common polymers were polyethylene, polyethylene terephthalate, polyamide, and polycarbonate, although a high degree of degradation was found in 43% of synthetic particles, not allowing their recognition up to a single polymer. Despite the high number of ingested MPs, fish health (evaluated by means of Fulton's body condition and hepatosomatic index) was not affected. Instead, fullness index showed an inverse linear relationship with the number of ingested particles, which suggests that also in perch MPs presence could interfere with feeding activity, as already described for other taxa.