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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. Detection Methods Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Identification of microplastics in surface water and Australian freshwater shrimp Paratya australiensis in Victoria, Australia

Environmental Pollution 2019 254 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.
Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Bingxu Nan, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Bingxu Nan, Lei Su Bingxu Nan, Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Vincent Pettigrove, Vincent Pettigrove, Claudette Kellar, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Vincent Pettigrove, Nicholas J. Craig, Vincent Pettigrove, Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Bingxu Nan, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Vincent Pettigrove, Vincent Pettigrove, Michael J. Keough, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Vincent Pettigrove, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su

Summary

Microplastics were detected in both surface water and the native Australian freshwater shrimp Paratya australiensis in Victoria, with shrimp accumulating plastic particles from their environment. The study adds to growing evidence that microplastics contaminate inland freshwater ecosystems and the species that live in them.

Study Type Environmental

Compared to marine microplastics research, few studies have bio-monitored microplastics in inland waters. It is also important to understand the microplastics' uptake and their potential risks to freshwater species. The Australian glass shrimp Paratya australiensis (Family: Atyidae) is commonly found in fresh waterbodies in eastern Australia, and are sensitive to anthropogenic stressors but have a wide tolerance range to the natural environmental conditions. This study aimed to understand the microplastics' occurrence and types in water samples and the shrimp P. australiensis, and identify if the shrimp could be a suitable bioindicator for microplastic pollution. Surface water and P. australiensis across ten urban and rural freshwater sites in Victoria were sampled. In total, 30 water samples and 100 shrimp were analysed for microplastic content, and shrimp body weights and sizes were also recorded. Microplastics were picked, photographed and identified using FT-IR microscopy: in water samples, 57.9% of items including suspect items were selected to identify; all microplastics found in shrimp samples were identified. Microplastics were present in the surface waters of all sites, with an average abundance of 0.40 ± 0.27 items/L. A total of 36% of shrimp contained microplastics with an average of 0.52 ± 0.55 items/ind (24 ± 31 items/g). Fibre was the most common shape, and blue was the most frequent colour in both water and shrimp samples. The dominant plastic types were polyester in water samples, and rayon in shrimp samples. Even though results from this study show a relatively low concentration of microplastics in water samples in comparison with global studies, it is worth noticing that microplastics were regularly detected in fresh waterbodies in Victoria, Australia. Compared with water samples, shrimp contained a wider variety of plastic types, suggesting they may potentially behave as passive samplers of microplastics pollution in freshwater environments.

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