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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. Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Microplastic Ingestion by Gelatinous Zooplankton May Lower Efficiency of the Biological Pump

Environmental Science & Technology 2019 139 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.
Alina M. Wieczorek, Alina M. Wieczorek, Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Alina M. Wieczorek, Alina M. Wieczorek, Alina M. Wieczorek, Alina M. Wieczorek, Alina M. Wieczorek, Alina M. Wieczorek, Fabien Lombard Peter Croot, Thomas K. Doyle, Fabien Lombard Peter Croot, Peter Croot, Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Peter Croot, Fabien Lombard Peter Croot, Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Jerome Sheahan, Fabien Lombard Jerome Sheahan, Thomas K. Doyle, Fabien Lombard Thomas K. Doyle, Thomas K. Doyle, Alina M. Wieczorek, Thomas K. Doyle, Thomas K. Doyle, Thomas K. Doyle, Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard Fabien Lombard

Summary

Researchers found that microplastic ingestion by salps (Salpa fusiformis) at environmentally realistic concentrations reduced the density and sinking speed of their fecal pellets, suggesting that widespread microplastic contamination could impair the biological pump's ability to sequester carbon in the deep ocean.

Polymers

The impacts of microplastics on some individual organisms have been well studied but what is less clear is what impacts microplastics have on wider ecosystem processes. Using salps as model organisms, we studied the effect of microplastic ingestion on the downward flux of high-density particulate organic matter in the form of salp faecal pellets. While to date most microplastic studies used virgin microplastics at unrealistic environmental concentrations here we exposed Salpa fusiformis to fractured and UV exposed polyethylene and polystyrene microplastics possessing a biofilm. It was found that when exposed to environmentally relevant concentrations, reported for the Mediterranean and the South Pacific Gyre, only few faecal pellets had microplastics incorporated within them. Under potential future scenarios, however, up to 46% of faecal pellets contained microplastics. Incorporated microplastics significantly altered the size, density and sinking rates of salp faecal pellets ( p-value < 0.05 in each instance). Sinking rates decreased by 1.35-fold (95% CI = 1.18, 1.56) for faecal pellets with polyethylene microplastics and 1.47-fold (95% CI = 1.34, 1.61) for polystyrene. These results suggest that today, microplastic ingestion by salps has minimal impact on the biological pump. However, under future microplastic concentrations (or in areas such as convergent zones), microplastics may have the potential to lower the efficiency of the biological pump.

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