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Microplastic ingestion by the farmed sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus in China

Environmental Pollution 2018 194 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.
Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Libin Zhang, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Lina Sun, Qing Wang Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Libin Zhang, Libin Zhang, Libin Zhang, Libin Zhang, Libin Zhang, Chenggang Lin, Libin Zhang, Lina Sun, Mohamed Mohsen, Chenggang Lin, Hongsheng Yang, Chenggang Lin, Hongsheng Yang, Lina Sun, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Lina Sun, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Qing Wang Mohamed Mohsen, Hongsheng Yang, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Hongsheng Yang, Mohamed Mohsen, Hongsheng Yang, Mohamed Mohsen, Libin Zhang, Chenggang Lin, Libin Zhang, Qing Wang Qing Wang Qing Wang

Summary

Sea cucumbers farmed along China's Bohai and Yellow Seas were found to ingest microplastics, with particles also detected in their coelomic fluid — suggesting internal translocation beyond the gut. The findings indicate farmed sea cucumbers may serve as useful sentinels for monitoring sediment microplastic pollution at aquaculture sites.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic ingestion by the farmed sea cucumber is undocumented. Microplastics were isolated from the sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus that was collected from eight farms along the Bohai Sea and the Yellow Sea in China. To examine microplastic ingestion, the intestines were isolated, digested and then subjected to the floatation test. The microplastic abundance in the sediment ranged from 20 to 1040 particles kg of dry sediment, while the ingested microplastics ranged from 0 to 30 particles intestine. After filtering the coelomic fluid, the extracted microplastics from the coelomic fluid ranged from 0 to 19 particles animal. Thus, we speculated that microplastics may transfer to the coelomic fluid of sea cucumber. The ingested microplastics did not correlate with the animal body weight but was site dependent, suggesting that sea cucumber may serve as sentinel for microplastic pollution monitoring in the sediment. The microplastics were identified by Fourier transform infrared micro spectroscopy, and the polymer types were mainly cellophane, polyester, and polyethylene terephthalate. This study revealed that, microplastics widely existed in sea cucumber farms, and that sea cucumbers ingest microplastics as suitable with their mouth open. Moreover, the microplastics might transfer to the coelomic fluid of the sea cucumber. Further investigations are needed to assess the chronic effect of the microplastics on the growth and physiological status of the sea cucumber.

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