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Feeding and digestion of the marine isopod Idotea emarginata challenged by poor food quality and microplastics

Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C Toxicology & Pharmacology 2019 38 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.
Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Špela Korez, Špela Korez, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski

Summary

Laboratory feeding experiments with the marine isopod Idotea emarginata found that microplastic ingestion combined with poor food quality reduced the animal's ability to digest and absorb nutrients effectively, suggesting that microplastics can worsen nutritional stress in marine invertebrates already facing food limitation. The combined effects of dietary microplastics and nutritional deficiency could impair the fitness of marine invertebrates under real-world conditions.

Polymers
Body Systems

Ingestion of microplastics can impair nutrition of marine invertebrates. In a laboratory study, we tested whether microplastics affect ingestion rates and gastrointestinal enzyme activities in the marine isopod Idotea emarginata. Isopods were fed for eight days with one out of four different food formulations: natural food (the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus) or synthetic diet consisting of freeze-dried algal powder embedded in agarose, both, with or without microplastic particles (fluorescent polymethyl methacrylate, 10-100 μm) at a concentration of 40 items per mg of food. The isopods accepted both types of food but consumed significantly more (average 3.1-fold) of the agar based synthetic food. I. emarginata responded to the reduced content of digestible organic matter in the synthetic food by a compensatory adjustment of the ingestion rates. Addition of microplastics had no effect on ingestion rates in natural food whereas the feeding rates for synthetic food varied in response to microplastics. Similarly, activity patterns of digestive enzymes, particularly those of esterases, changed significantly in the treatment with synthetic food. Isopods fed with synthetic food alone showed elevated esterase activities in the gut while those isopods fed with synthetic food and microplastics showed elevated esterase activities in the midgut gland but not in the gut. Apparently, not the exposure to microplastic alone, but the combined effects of reduced nutrient availability and microplastic ingestion caused considerable biochemical reactions in the digestive organs of the isopods.

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