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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

Effects of ingested polystyrene microplastics on brine shrimp, Artemia parthenogenetica

Environmental Pollution 2018 142 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.
Weiwei Zhang, Weiwei Zhang, Yi Cong, Weiwei Zhang, Ying Wang, Ying Wang, Ying Wang, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Yi Cong, Jingli Mu, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Fei Jin, Weiwei Zhang, Ying Wang, Ying Wang, Mingxing Zhang, Mingxing Zhang, Fei Jin, Weiwei Zhang, Zheng Mao, Zheng Mao, Dian Zhang, Mingxing Zhang, Juying Wang Weiwei Zhang, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Jingli Mu, Yi Cong, Fei Jin, Guanghui Ding, Mingxing Zhang, Fei Jin, Mingxing Zhang, Juying Wang Juying Wang Mingxing Zhang, Fei Jin, Fei Jin, Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Weiwei Zhang, Guanghui Ding, Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Guanghui Ding, Yi Cong, Juying Wang Juying Wang Mingxing Zhang, Yi Cong, Jingli Mu, Zheng Mao, Juying Wang Yi Cong, Fei Jin, Juying Wang Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Zheng Mao, Yi Cong, Weiwei Zhang, Dian Zhang, Jingli Mu, Juying Wang Juying Wang Fei Jin, Fei Jin, Juying Wang Weiwei Zhang, Yifei Cao, Weiwei Zhang, Fei Jin, Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Juying Wang Juying Wang Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Yi Cong, Jingli Mu, Yi Cong, Fei Jin, Jingli Mu, Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Lijun Wang, Juying Wang Weiwei Zhang, Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Weiwei Zhang, Juying Wang Juying Wang Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Jingli Mu, Weiwei Zhang, Juying Wang

Summary

Brine shrimp larvae (Artemia parthenogenetica) were exposed to 10 μm polystyrene microspheres at concentrations close to environmentally extrapolated levels, with microspheres clearly ingested and accumulated in the gut, resulting in reduced feeding rates and growth at higher concentrations. The study demonstrates that microplastic ingestion by brine shrimp, a widely used aquaculture feed organism, occurs at ecologically relevant concentrations and causes sublethal harm.

Microplastics are a contaminant of emerging concern which enter the marine environment from a variety of sources. The ingestion and toxic effects of microplastics on marine life, especially for filter feeders, are a cause of concern in view of their ubiquitous nature and their similar size as food sources. To assess the toxic effects of microspheres ingested by brine shrimp larvae, we exposed Artemia parthenogenetica to 10 μm polystyrene microspheres at different concentrations. These concentrations were approximate to the extrapolated marine aquatic environmentally relevant concentrations. The lowest polystyrene concentrations at which ingestion was visualized in A. parthenogenetica were 12 ± 0.57 particles/mL (6.7 ± 0.32 μg/L) and 1.1 ± 0.16 particles/mL (0.61 ± 0.088 μg/L), respectively. There were no significant impacts on the survival, growth or development in A. parthenogenetica occurring over the 14-d exposure across a range of polystyrene nominal concentrations (1-1000 particles/mL or 0.55-550 μg/L). However, abnormal ultrastructures of intestinal epithelial cells were observed upon exposure to polystyrene microspheres, including fewer and disordered microvilli, an increased number of mitochondrion and the appearance of autophagosome. These phenomena could affect nutrition absorption and energy metabolism. Although no major acute or chronic toxicity effects on A. parthenogenetica were observed over 24-h or 14-d exposures, this study provides evidence that the ingestion of polystyrene microplastics at extrapolated environmentally relevant concentrations can be visualized through a microscope to be causing a series of responses in intestinal epithelial cells.

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