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Microplastics as vectors of metals contamination in Mediterranean Sea

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2021 44 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Stefania Squadrone, Stefania Squadrone, Sabina Pederiva, Tabata Bezzo, Alessandra Griglione, Tabata Bezzo, Alessandra Griglione, Maria Cesarina Abete, Rocco Mussat Sartor, Maria Cesarina Abete Nicola Nurra, Marco Battuello, Stefania Squadrone, Paola Brizio, Paola Brizio, Nicola Nurra, Rocco Mussat Sartor, Stefania Squadrone, Alessandra Griglione, Marco Battuello, Alessandra Griglione, Paola Brizio, Alessandra Griglione, Paola Brizio, Tabata Bezzo, Alessandra Griglione, Tabata Bezzo, Maria Cesarina Abete, Maria Cesarina Abete Maria Cesarina Abete Maria Cesarina Abete, Maria Cesarina Abete, Maria Cesarina Abete

Summary

Researchers collected zooplankton from Mediterranean Sea sites and measured metal concentrations associated with ingested microplastics, finding elevated cadmium, lead, and nickel on MP surfaces compared to surrounding water, demonstrating that MP-bound metals become available to zooplankton and could biomagnify up the food chain.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are contaminants of great concern all over the world. Microplastics constitute pollutants themselves; moreover, other contaminants such as metals are easily absorbed on their plastic surface, becoming bioavailable to marine biota such as zooplankton.We collected marine zooplankton from Mediterranean Sea to investigate trace elements associated with microplastics. Samples were subjected to visual sorting by a stereomicroscope, collected with sterile tweezers, pooled and subjected to sonication, filtration, and drying before being subjected to acid extraction. An ICP-MS was utilized for multi-elemental determination.Aluminum, iron, chromium, zinc, nickel, molybdenum, manganese, lead cobalt, and copper were found at concentrations of mg/kg while arsenic, vanadium, rubidium, and cadmium at level of μg kg. Other elements such as silver, beryllium, bismuth, selenium, tin, and thallium were under the limit of quantitation. Lower levels of iron and manganese in samples from Italy were found in comparison to England and Brazil, while aluminum, copper, and zinc registered comparable values. The presence of metals in marine waters is strictly related to sediment lithology and anthropogenic inputs, but plastic plays a key role as vectors for metal ions in the marine system, being able to concentrate metals several order of magnitude higher than in surrounding waters and exerting potential toxicity for living beings after chronic exposure.

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