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Incidence of Watershed Land Use on the Consumption of Meso and Microplastics by Fish Communities in Uruguayan Lowland Streams

Water 2021 26 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Juan Pablo Lozoya, Camila Vidal, Camila Vidal, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Juan Pablo Lozoya, Giancarlo Tesitore, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Franco Teixeira de Mello Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Giancarlo Tesitore, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Franco Teixeira de Mello Guillermo Goyenola, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Camila Vidal, Franco Teixeira de Mello Juan Pablo Lozoya, Juan Pablo Lozoya, Camila Vidal, Franco Teixeira de Mello Juan Pablo Lozoya, Giancarlo Tesitore, Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello Franco Teixeira de Mello

Summary

Researchers found that fish in urbanized Uruguayan lowland streams ingested significantly more meso- and microplastics than fish in streams draining extensive ranching land, with 309 individuals from 29 species analyzed. The results link watershed land use intensity to plastic contamination levels in freshwater fish communities.

Body Systems

Physical-chemical and biologicaldiversity of streams are influenced by the land use in their watersheds. Plastics currently make up the most important waste asset, representing an important part of the transported and accumulated material in water courses. This work analyzes the consumption of plastics debris by the fish communities in streams with two contrasting types of land use. We worked with threestreams impacted by urbanization and threeby extensive ranching. The stomach and intestinal contents of 309 individuals of 29 species were analyzed, by a modified alkaline digestion, and observed under a stereo microscope with polarized light. A total of 373 plastic itemswere found, of which the majority corresponded to fibers (318). A significant difference was found between the percentage of individuals that consumed plastic debrisbetween both systems (51.6% in ranchers and 76.6% in urban, p = 0.014 Mood’s Median), but no difference was found in the average ingested per individual. This study establishes the first baseline on plastic debris consumption by fish in Uruguayan streams, showing the extent of the plastic and microplastic pollution problem. Although there are differences between the analyzed sites, we also observed significant contamination in streams far from urbanization.

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