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Sponges as bioindicators for microparticulate pollutants

2020 6 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Elsa B. Girard, Adrian Fuchs, Melanie Kaliwoda, Markus T. Lasut, Evelyn Ploetz, Wolfgang W. Schmahl, Gert Wörheide

Summary

Researchers analyzed 15 coral reef sponges from Indonesia using microscopy and Raman spectroscopy and found they accumulate microparticle pollutants including microplastics. Sponges were confirmed as useful bioindicators for monitoring microparticulate pollution in reef environments.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

ABSTRACT Amongst other threats, the world’s oceans are faced with man-made pollution, including an increasing number of microparticulate pollutants. Sponges, aquatic filter-feeding animals, are able to incorporate fine foreign particles, and thus may be a potential bioindicator for microparticulate pollutants. To address this question, 15 coral reef demosponges sampled around Bangka Island (North Sulawesi, Indonesia) were analyzed for the nature of their foreign particle content using traditional histological methods, advanced light microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. Sampled sponges accumulated and embedded the very fine sediment fraction (< 200 µm), absent in the surrounding sand, in the ectosome (outer epithelia) and spongin fibers (skeletal elements), which was confirmed by two-photon microscopy. A total of 34 different particle types were identified, of which degraded man-made products, i.e., polystyrene, cotton, titanium dioxide and blue-pigmented particles, were incorporated by eight specimens at concentrations between 91 to 612 particle/g dry sponge tissue. As sponges can weigh several hundreds of grams, we conservatively extrapolate that sponges can incorporate on average 10,000 microparticulate pollutants in their tissue. The uptake of particles, however, appears independent of the material, which suggests that the fluctuation in material ratios is due to the spatial variation of surrounding microparticles. Therefore, sponges have a strong potential to biomonitor microparticulate pollutants, such as microplastics and other degraded industrial products.

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