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Relevance and reliability of evidence for microplastic contamination in seafood: A critical review using Australian consumption patterns as a case study

Environmental Pollution 2021 65 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Michaela E. Miller, Michaela E. Miller, Michaela E. Miller, Michaela E. Miller, Michaela E. Miller, Michaela E. Miller, Frederieke J. Kroon, Amanda L. Dawson, Amanda L. Dawson, Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Amanda L. Dawson, Marina Santana Michaela E. Miller, Marina Santana Michaela E. Miller, Marina Santana Michaela E. Miller, Marina Santana Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Amanda L. Dawson, Michaela E. Miller, Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Amanda L. Dawson, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Michaela E. Miller, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Frederieke J. Kroon, Marina Santana Marina Santana Marina Santana

Summary

Researchers critically reviewed evidence on microplastic contamination in seafood, using Australian consumption patterns as a case study to assess human exposure risk. They found that while microplastics have been documented in many commercial marine species, most contamination is found in tissues that are not typically consumed by humans. The study concludes that current evidence does not support significant dietary microplastic exposure from seafood but calls for better standardized research methods.

Body Systems

Seafood contamination with, and human consumption of, microplastics (MPs) have recently been highlighted as an emerging concern for global food security. While there is evidence that commercial marine species are contaminated with MPs, it is still unknown if seafood can act as a vector for MP transfer to human consumers. Microplastics have been reported in the digestive tract, gills and in select internal organs of marine animals. However, many of these tissues are not typically eaten by human consumers but discarded. In this critical review, we examined the peer-reviewed literature for evidence of MP contamination in seafood, and the potential transfer to human consumers. Based on known seafood consumption patterns in a typical Australian diet, we assessed the relevance and reliability of the current body of literature to examine the prospect and risk of MP transfer. The relevance of data was considered based on the organism studied, origin of the samples, and the tissues analysed, while reliability was assessed based on procedural methodologies used to derive the data. A review of 132 studies found limited evidence of MP contamination in edible tissues from fresh fish or crustaceans. MP presence was confirmed in packaged fish, as well as in fresh and packaged bivalve molluscs. The limited number of studies satisfying the relevance and reliability criteria (n = 24) precluded a quantitative assessment of the potential risk associated with MP transfer. While consumption of packaged fish and bivalve molluscs may result in the consumption of MPs by humans, it is currently unknown whether this presents a health risk.

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