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Mild toxicity of polystyrene and polymethylmethacrylate microplastics in Paracentrotus lividus early life stages

Marine Environmental Research 2020 34 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Philippe J. Thomas, Daniel Mark Lyons Giovanni Pagano, Philippe J. Thomas, Marco Trifuoggi, Rahime Oral, Giovanni Pagano, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Serkan Tez, Rahime Oral, Giovanni Pagano, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Maria Toscanesi, Serkan Tez, Marco Trifuoggi, Serkan Tez, Serkan Tez, Marco Trifuoggi, Serkan Tez, Giovanni Pagano, Maria Toscanesi, Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Giovanni Pagano, Marco Trifuoggi, Giovanni Pagano, Maria Toscanesi, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Pasquale Ranieri, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Pasquale Ranieri, Marco Trifuoggi, Daniel Mark Lyons Marco Trifuoggi, Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Maria Toscanesi, Maria Toscanesi, Marco Trifuoggi, Philippe J. Thomas, Marco Trifuoggi, Daniel Mark Lyons Maria Toscanesi, Daniel Mark Lyons

Summary

Sea urchin embryos showed little sensitivity to polystyrene and polymethylmethacrylate microplastics, but sperm exposed to these particles showed decreased fertilization success and larvae ingested one polymer type more readily than the other. The findings suggest reproductive effects may occur at the sperm stage before embryo development begins.

Polymers
Body Systems

The vast category of microplastics in the marine environment, encompassing among other aspects their persistence, degradation and impact on biota, has become an important topic of research. In spite of environmental health concerns, much work has yet to be done on understanding the potential roles of polymer sources, composition and particle sizes in causing adverse effects which have already been observed in a number of biota. The present study was aimed at adding to current knowledge by verifying if, and to what extent, embryogenesis in the sea urchin species Paracentrotus lividus is adversely affected by polystyrene and polymethylmethacrylate virgin microparticles over a size range 1-230 μm and at concentrations of 0.1-10 mg L. Developing embryos which came in contact with the microplastics only after fertilisation did not display a significant increase of developmental defects. Unlike embryo exposures, when P. lividus sperm were exposed to the microplastics or their leachates, modest, yet significant effects were observed, both in terms of decreased fertilisation rate and increase of transmissible damage to offspring. Further, it was noted that larvae more readily ingested polymethylmethacrylate than polystyrene microparticles after 3 days which may represent a route for enhancing the toxicity of the former compared to the latter. Overall, these findings provide evidence for lesser sensitivity of P. lividus early life stages to microplastics compared to other urchins such as Sphaerechinus granularis. In turn, the more robust response of P. lividus highlights the importance of choosing an appropriate test species with the highest sensitivity when investigating mildly harmful materials.

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