0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Bioassays to assess the ecotoxicological impact of polyethylene microplastics and two organic pollutants, simazine and ibuprofen

Chemosphere 2021 33 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.
Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Fajardo, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Fajardo, Gonzalo Costa, Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Fajardo, Gonzalo Costa, Carmen Martı́n, Gonzalo Costa, Gonzalo Costa, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Mar Nande, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, M. D. San Andrés, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Mar Nande, M. D. San Andrés, Mar Nande, Fernando González, Fernando González, Mar Nande, Gerardo Mengs, Gerardo Mengs, Fernando González, Gerardo Mengs, Mar Nande, Gonzalo Costa, Gonzalo Costa, Mar Nande, Mar Nande, Mar Nande, Gonzalo Costa, Fernando González, Gerardo Mengs, Margarita Martín Margarita Martín, Gerardo Mengs, Margarita Martín, Margarita Martín, Margarita Martín S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Margarita Martín S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Margarita Martín, Margarita Martín

Summary

Researchers assessed the ecotoxicological impact of polyethylene microplastics combined with the organic pollutants simazine and ibuprofen using bioassays in terrestrial ecosystems, finding measurable toxic effects on soil organisms from both the microplastics and co-contaminants.

Polymers

Research on the environmental impact of plastics, especially on the effect of microplastics (MPs), has become a priority issue in recent years, mainly in terrestrial ecosystems where there is a lack of studies. This work aims to assess the impact of two types of polyethylene MPs, white microbeads (W) and fluorescent blue microbeads (FB), and their interactions with two contaminants, ibuprofen (Ib) and simazine (Sz), on different organisms. A set of bioassays for Vibrio fischeri, Caenorhabditis elegans and Lactuca sativa was carried out, which helped to establish the ecotoxicological impact of those pollutants. C. elegans showed the least sensitivity, while V. fischeri and L. sativa showed a high toxicological response to MPs alone. We found that W and FB induced an inhibition of 27% and 5.79%, respectively, in V. fischeri, and the growth inhibition rates were near 70% in L. sativa for both MPs. MPs exhibited a potential role as contaminant vectors in V. fischeri since the inhibition caused by W-Ib or W-Sz complexes was near 39%. The W-Sz complex significantly reduced leaf development in L. sativa, and a reduction of 30% in seed germination was detected when the complex FB-Sz was tested. This study reveals the importance of designing a complete set of analyses with organisms from different trophic levels, considering the great variability in the effects of MPs and the high number of relevant factors.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper