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Treatment-level impacts of microplastic exposure may be confounded by variation in individual-level responses in juvenile fish

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2021 24 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.
Gerrit B. Nanninga, Gerrit B. Nanninga, Gerrit B. Nanninga, Gerrit B. Nanninga, Gerrit B. Nanninga, Assaf Pertzelan, Andrea Manica Andrea Manica Andrea Manica Moshe Kiflawi, Andrea Manica Roi Holzman, Isolde Plakolm, Gerrit B. Nanninga, Gerrit B. Nanninga, Isolde Plakolm, Andrea Manica Andrea Manica

Summary

Researchers found high variation in individual fish responses to microplastic exposure, suggesting that treatment-level summaries in laboratory studies may obscure meaningful individual-level effects and calling for improved statistical approaches in ecotoxicology.

Microplastic (MP) pollution is a key global environmental issue and laboratory exposure studies on aquatic biota are proliferating at an exponential rate. However, most research is limited to treatment-level effects, ignoring that there may be substantial within-population variation in responses to anthropogenic stressors. MP exposure experiments often reveal considerable, yet largely overlooked, inter-individual variation in particle uptake within concentration treatments. Here, we investigated to what degree treatment-level responses to MP exposure may be affected by variation in MP ingestion rates in the early life stages of a marine fish, the Gilt-head seabream, Sparus aurata. First, we tested whether MP ingestion variation is repeatable. Second, we assessed to what degree this variation may determine individual-level effects of MP exposure on fitness-related behavioural performance (i.e., escape response). We found that consistent inter-individual variation in MP ingestion was prevalent and led to differential impacts within exposure treatments. Individuals with high MP ingestion rates exhibited markedly inferior escape responses, a result that was partially concealed in treatment-level analyses. Our findings show that the measured response of populations to environmental perturbations could be confounded by variation in individual-level responses and that the explicit integration of MP ingestion variation can reveal cryptic patterns during exposure experiments.

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