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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Abundance and distribution of microplastics within surface sediments of a key shellfish growing region of Canada

PLoS ONE 2018 74 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.
V. D. Kazmiruk, V. D. Kazmiruk, V. D. Kazmiruk, Leah Bendell Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Leah Bendell Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, V. D. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Leah Bendell Leah Bendell V. D. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Leah Bendell V. D. Kazmiruk, Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Leah Bendell Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Tamara N. Kazmiruk, Leah Bendell

Summary

Microplastics were found across all sediment size classes at shellfish farming sites in British Columbia, Canada, with higher concentrations in finer sediment fractions. The results raise concerns for the safety of bivalves grown in this region and for the broader health of one of Canada's most productive shellfish aquaculture areas.

Study Type Environmental

The abundance and distribution of microplastics within 5 sediment size classes (>5000 μm, 1000-5000 μm, 250-1000 μm, 250-0.63 μm and < 0.63 μm) were determined for 16 sites within Lambert Channel and Baynes Sound, British Columbia, Canada. This region is Canada's premier growing area for the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas). Microplastics were found at all sampling locations indicating widespread contamination of this region with these particles. Three types of microplastics were recovered: microbeads, which occurred in the greatest number (up to 25000/kg dry sediment) and microfibers and microfragments, which were much less in number compared with microbeads and occurred in similar amounts (100-300/kg dry sediment). Microbeads were recovered primarily in the < 0.63 μm and 250-0.63 μm sediment size class, whereas microfragments and microfibers were generally identified in all 5 sediment size classes. Abundance and distribution of the three types of microplastics were spatially dependent with principal component analysis (PCA) indicating that 84 percent of the variation in abundance and distribution was due to the presence of high numbers of microbeads at three locations within the study region. At these sites, microbeads expressed as a percent component of the sediment by weight was similar to key geochemical components that govern trace metal behavior and availability to benthic organisms. Microbeads have been shown to accumulate metals from the aquatic environment, hence in addition to the traditional geochemical components such as silt and organic matter, microplastics also need to be considered as a sediment component that can influence trace metal geochemistry. Our findings have shown that BC's premier oyster growing region is highly contaminated with microplastics, notably microbeads. It would be prudent to assess the degree to which oysters from this region are ingesting microplastics. If so, it would have direct implications for Canada's oyster farming industry with respect to the health of the oyster and the quality of product that is being farmed and sets an example for other shellfish growing regions of the world.

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