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Microplastics biomonitoring in Australian urban wetlands using a common noxious fish (Gambusia holbrooki)

Chemosphere 2019 156 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, Kathryn L. Hassell 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, Vincent Pettigrove, Bingxu Nan, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su, Lei Su, Vincent Pettigrove, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Vincent Pettigrove, Lei Su, 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, Kathryn L. Hassell

Summary

Using the invasive fish Gambusia holbrooki as a biomonitor in Australian urban wetlands, this study found microplastics in 75% of fish examined, with fiber shapes dominating, suggesting these fish are useful sentinels for freshwater microplastic exposure.

Study Type Environmental

Biomonitoring microplastics in freshwater ecosystems has been insufficient in comparison with its practice in marine environments. It is an important first step to understand microplastic uptake in organisms when assessing risk in natural freshwater habitats. We conducted microplastic biomonitoring within the Greater Melbourne Area; where the microplastic baseline pollution in freshwater organisms was largely unknown. A common noxious fish species, Gambusia holbrooki, was targeted. Individuals (n = 180) from nine wetlands were analyzed. Uptake pathway, size, weight and gender were examined in relation to microplastic uptake in the body (presumed uptake via gut) and head (presumed uptake via gills). On average, 19.4% of fish had microplastics present in their bodies with an abundance of 0.6 items per individual (items/ind) and 7.2% of fish had microplastics in their heads with an abundance of 0.1 items/ind. Polyester was the dominant plastic type and fibers were the most common shape. The amount of microplastics in Gambusia holbrooki in current study is relatively low in a global comparison. The bodies of fish contained more microplastics on average than heads, and the size of microplastics detected in heads were smaller than those found in bodies. Microplastic uptake was directly proportional to size and weight. Furthermore, female individuals showed a tendency to ingest more microplastics than males. Laboratory experiments under controlled conditions are suggested to further explore such relationships. Our findings are important to understanding the potential ecological risks posed by microplastics to organisms in freshwater environments and provide suitable methodologies to conduct biomonitoring in future investigations.

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