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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 Sign in to save

An assessment of the ability to ingest and excrete microplastics by filter-feeders: A case study with the Mediterranean mussel

Environmental Pollution 2018 157 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Cátia Gonçalves, Cátia Gonçalves, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Marta Martins, Marta Martins, Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Cátia Gonçalves, Maria Helena Costa, Marta Martins, Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Pedro M. Costa, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Marta Martins, Marta Martins, Marta Martins, Pedro M. Costa, Pedro M. Costa, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Maria Helena Costa, Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Maria Helena Costa, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Maria Helena Costa, Maria Helena Costa, Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Pedro M. Costa, Marta Martins, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Maria Helena Costa, Marta Martins, Maria Helena Costa, Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral Paula Sobral

Summary

Mediterranean mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) were exposed to spherical polystyrene microplastics of different sizes and concentrations and examined for tissue-level effects and ingestion/egestion dynamics, with smaller particles showing greater retention and histological changes in digestive tissue. The study provides detailed pathophysiological evidence that MP size governs both retention time and the severity of tissue-level effects in marine filter feeders.

Polymers
Body Systems

Plastic debris has been recognized as a growing threat to marine biota due to its widespread distribution and possible interactions with marine species. Concerns over the effects of plastic polymers in marine ecosystems is reflected in the high number of toxicological studies, regarding microplastics (<5 mm) and marine fauna. Although several studies reported that organisms ingest and subsequently eliminate microplastics (MP), the potential effects at organ and tissue level remain unclear, especially considering exposure to different microplastic sizes and concentrations. The present study aimed at investigating potential pathophysiological effects of the ingestion of MP by marine filter-feeders. For the purpose, Mediterranean mussel (Mytilus galloprovincialis) was exposed to spherical polystyrene MP (2 and 10 μm Ø) over short- and medium-term exposure periods, under single and combined concentrations that represent high, yet realistic doses (10 and 1000 MP mL). Overall, results suggest rapid MP' clearance from water column by filtering, regardless of MP size. Ingestion occurred, identified by MP in the lumen of the gut (mostly in midgut region), followed by excretion through faeces. However, no MP were found in gills or digestive gland diverticula. Biochemical indicators for oxidative stress were generally irresponsive regardless of organ and time of exposure. Small foci of haemocytic infiltration in gastric epithelia were found, albeit not clearly related to MP ingestion. Globally, no evident histopathological damage was recorded in whole-body sections of exposed animals. The present findings highlight the adaptative ability of filter-feeding bivalves to cope with filtration of suspended MP, resulting in rapid elimination and reduced internal damage following ingestion of spherical MP. Nevertheless, the fact that the animals are able to translocate MP to the gut reveals that filter feeding organisms may indeed became a target of concern for fragmented materials with smaller, mixed sizes and sharper edges.

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