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. Sign in to save

Current environmental microplastic levels do not alter emergence behaviour in the intertidal gastropod Littorina littorea

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2020 24 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.
Darragh Doyle, Joao, Frias, Róisín Nash, Martin P. Gammell

Summary

Researchers found that environmentally relevant microplastic concentrations did not significantly alter the predator-avoidance emergence behavior of the common periwinkle (Littorina littorea), suggesting that behavioral impairment may not occur at current environmental exposure levels in this intertidal gastropod. The study calls for further behavioral research across a wider range of microplastic concentrations and species.

Microplastic ingestion by intertidal fauna is a well-documented phenomenon, with emphasis on the physiological consequences of microplastic exposure. However, the behavioural effects of microplastic ingestion have not been explored to the same degree, even in species with documented microplastic ingestion. In this study, the predator-avoidance emergence response of Littorina littorea was assessed and related to microplastic levels within the samples. This is a novel approach to microplastic behavioural experiments, whereby current environmental L. littorea microplastic levels are assessed, rather than levels vastly in excess of those recorded under field conditions. The results showed no difference in emergence likelihood or emergence latency related to microplastic abundance, sex, or treatment. However, L. littorea size did have a significant effect on emergence likelihood and emergence latency, with smaller individuals emerging faster and more frequently. This study shows that microplastics, at their current environmental levels, do not seem to affect L. littorea emergence behaviour.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic leachates impair behavioural vigilance and predator avoidance in a temperate intertidal gastropod

Researchers found that leachates from microplastics impaired chemical vigilance and predator avoidance behavior in an intertidal gastropod, demonstrating that microplastic chemical contamination can compromise anti-predator responses in marine invertebrates even without direct particle ingestion.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic exposure increases predictability of predator avoidance strategies in hermit crabs

Researchers exposed European hermit crabs to microplastics and found the crabs became less cautious and more predictable in their predator-avoidance behavior, reducing their overall variation in response times. This behavioral shift suggests microplastic pollution may make these crabs more vulnerable to predation in the wild.

Article Tier 2

Quantification and characterization of microplastics in an intertidal gastropod the common periwinkle Littorina littorea

Researchers examined common periwinkle snails from Saint Martin's Island in the Bay of Bengal and found microplastics in 100% of the specimens, with polypropylene and polyethylene as the dominant polymer types. The average contamination was about 7.76 microplastic particles per gram of tissue, predominantly black and red fibers in the 100-1500 micrometer range. Polymer hazard index assessments indicated risk categories ranging from high to dangerous, though the overall pollution load at the site remained relatively low.

Article Tier 2

Size-dependent response of the mussel collective behaviour to plastic leachates and predator cues

Researchers found that polypropylene microplastic leachates disrupted the collective anti-predator behavior of blue mussels, impairing the aggregation response that protects them from predatory crabs — with small mussels, the crab's preferred prey, most severely affected — suggesting plastic pollution could destabilize intertidal ecosystems through behavioral cascades.

Article Tier 2

The influence of microplastics pollution on the feeding behavior of a prominent sandy beach amphipod, Orchestoidea tuberculata (Nicolet, 1849)

Microplastic pollution was found to reduce feeding activity and slow growth in a beach amphipod (small crustacean), even at environmentally relevant concentrations. This suggests microplastics can disrupt energy balance and population health in small invertebrates that play important roles in sandy beach ecosystems.

Share this paper