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.
Sign in to save
Presence of microplastics in benthic and epibenthic organisms: Influence of habitat, feeding mode and trophic level
Environmental Pollution2018
281 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.
Francesco Regoli
Ketil Hylland,
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Agathe Bour,
Agathe Bour,
Agathe Bour,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Agathe Bour,
Agathe Bour,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Agathe Bour,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Ketil Hylland,
Agathe Bour,
Agathe Bour,
Agathe Bour,
Agathe Bour,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Agathe Bour,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Ketil Hylland,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Ketil Hylland,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Ketil Hylland,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Ketil Hylland,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Ketil Hylland,
Stefania Gorbi,
Ketil Hylland,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Agathe Bour,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Ketil Hylland,
Agathe Bour,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Summary
This study examined microplastic occurrence in benthic and epibenthic invertebrates from the Western English Channel, finding that habitat type, feeding mode, and trophic level all influenced microplastic ingestion rates. The results suggest that bottom-dwelling filter feeders and deposit feeders are among the most exposed organisms in seafloor food webs.
The exponential production and use of plastics has generated increasing environmental release over the past decades, and microplastics (MPs) have been reported across all the oceans. Field studies have documented the occurrence of MPs in several species, but important knowledge gaps still remain. In the present study, we characterized the distribution of MPs in ten sediment-dwelling and epibenthic species representative of different habitat, feeding modes and trophic levels within the inner Oslofjord (Oslo, Norway), an area subjected to moderate anthropogenic pressures. Analysed species included fish, bivalves, echinoderms, crustaceans and polychaetes. MPs were present in all the species with a frequency up to 65% of positive individuals for some species. In most cases, 1 or 2 MPs were found per individual, but some organisms contained up to 7 particles. A total of 8 polymer typologies were identified, with PE and PP being the most common according to our extraction protocol. MP sizes ranged from 41 μm to lines as long as 9 mm. Our results indicate that occurrence of MPs in analysed biota is not influenced by organism habitat or trophic level, while characteristics and typology of polymers might be significantly affected by feeding mode of organisms.