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Effect of environmentally relevant concentrations of potentially toxic microplastic on coastal copepods

Aquatic Toxicology 2020 50 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Marja Koski, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Jens Søndergaard, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Marja Koski, Marja Koski, Anette Maria Christensen, Anette Maria Christensen, Anette Maria Christensen, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Anette Maria Christensen, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Marja Koski, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen Marja Koski, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Marja Koski, Torkel Gissel Nielsen Torkel Gissel Nielsen

Summary

This study tested the effects of tire wear particles (TWP), a type of toxic microplastic, on two coastal copepod species at environmentally realistic concentrations, finding reduced feeding and reproduction rates even at low doses. Tire wear particles are abundant in coastal waters and may be suppressing populations of these zooplankton, which are foundational to marine food webs.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Tire wear particles (TWP) are both abundant and potentially toxic types of microplastic (MP) in the coastal ocean. We tested the effects of TWP type (new tires, old tires, rubber granules from artificial turfs) and concentration (10-10,000 TWP L) on feeding, reproduction and fecal pellet production of two common coastal copepods at high (400 μg C L) and low (40 μg C L) food concentration consisting of a cryptophyte Rhodomonas sp. We did not observe any effect of TWP on copepods at environmentally relevant concentrations of <10 TWP L. At TWP concentrations that were >100 times higher than the MP concentrations measured in coastal waters, food concentration, copepod feeding mode, TWP concentration and TWP type interacted to influence copepod feeding and pellet production, while reproduction was unaffected. Our results suggest that TWP at the current measured concentrations in the ocean environment is not likely to be a threat to the common coastal copepods.

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