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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

Capture, swallowing, and egestion of microplastics by a planktivorous juvenile fish

Environmental Pollution 2018 306 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.
Nicolas C. Ory, Nicolas C. Ory, Martín Thiel Nicolas C. Ory, Nicolas C. Ory, Nicolas C. Ory, Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Nicolas C. Ory, Mark Lenz, Camila Gallardo, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Camila Gallardo, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Camila Gallardo, Nicolas C. Ory, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Camila Gallardo, Nicolas C. Ory, Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Nicolas C. Ory, Martín Thiel Nicolas C. Ory, Martín Thiel Nicolas C. Ory, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Mark Lenz, Martín Thiel Martín Thiel Martín Thiel

Summary

Slow-motion video analysis of a planktivorous fish revealed that it engulfed microplastics using the same feeding mechanism as natural prey, and that particles could be expelled through the gills or swallowed. The study provides mechanistic insight into how fish ingest microplastics and helps explain why particles resembling zooplankton in size and appearance are most commonly found in fish guts.

Microplastics (<5 mm) have been found in many fish species, from most marine environments. However, the mechanisms underlying microplastic ingestion by fish are still unclear, although they are important to determine the pathway of microplastics along marine food webs. Here we conducted experiments in the laboratory to examine microplastic ingestion (capture and swallowing) and egestion by juveniles of the planktivorous palm ruff, Seriolella violacea (Centrolophidae). As expected, fish captured preferentially black microplastics, similar to food pellets, whereas microplastics of other colours (blue, translucent, and yellow) were mostly co-captured when floating close to food pellets. Microplastics captured without food were almost always spit out, and were only swallowed when they were mixed with food in the fish's mouth. Food probably produced a 'gustatory trap' that impeded the fish to discriminate and reject the microplastics. Most fish (93% of total) egested all the microplastics after 7 days, on average, and 49 days at most, substantially longer than food pellets (<2 days). No acute detrimental effects of microplastics on fish were observable, but potential sublethal effects of microplastics on the fish physiological and behavioural responses still need to be tested. This study highlights that visually-oriented planktivorous fish, many species of which are of commercial value and ecological importance within marine food webs, are susceptible to ingest microplastics resembling or floating close to their planktonic prey.

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