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Meta Analysis ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 1 ? Systematic review or meta-analysis. Synthesizes findings across many studies. Strongest evidence. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Environmentally relevant concentrations of microplastics influence the locomotor activity of aquatic biota

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2021 81 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Tao Sun, Junfei Zhan, Fei Li, Chenglong Ji, Huifeng Wu, Huifeng Wu

Summary

At environmentally relevant concentrations (≤1 mg/L), microplastics significantly reduced swimming speed and movement distance in aquatic organisms by 5-8%, with the locomotor decline linked to energy depletion, gut microbiota dysbiosis, inflammation, and neurotoxic responses.

Body Systems
Study Type Review

The occurrence of microplastics (MPs) in various marine and freshwater matrices has attracted great attention. However, the effect of MPs in natural environment on the locomotor performance of aquatic biota is still controversial. Therefore, this meta-analysis was conducted, involving 116 effect sizes from 2347 samples, to quantitatively evaluate the alteration in locomotor behavior of aquatic organisms induced by MPs at environmentally relevant concentrations (≤ 1 mg/L, median = 0.125 mg/L). It was shown that MP exposure significantly inhibited the average speed and moved distance of aquatic organisms by 5% and 8% (p < 0.05), respectively, compared with the control, resulting in an obvious reduction of locomotor ability by 6% (p < 0.05). Egger's test indicated that the results were stable without publication bias (p > 0.05). The complex influence of MPs on the locomotor ability were characterized through random-effects meta-regression analyses, presenting size-, time-, concentration-dependent manners and multi-factors interactions. In addition, several physiological changes, including energy reserve reduction, metabolism disorder, gut microbiota dysbiosis, inflammation response, neurotoxic response, and oxidative stress, of aquatic organisms triggered by MP exposure at environmentally relevant concentrations were also provided, which might account for the MPs-induced locomotor activity decline.

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