0
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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Environmentally relevant concentrations of polyethylene microplastics negatively impact the survival, growth and emergence of sediment-dwelling invertebrates

Environmental Pollution 2018 317 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Peta A. Neale, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Anupama Kumar, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Anupama Kumar, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Anupama Kumar, Anupama Kumar, Anupama Kumar, Shima Ziajahromi, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Shima Ziajahromi, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Peta A. Neale, Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Anupama Kumar, Anupama Kumar, Anupama Kumar, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Anupama Kumar, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Peta A. Neale, Peta A. Neale, Anupama Kumar, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Anupama Kumar, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Peta A. Neale, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch Frédéric D.L. Leusch Shima Ziajahromi, Frédéric D.L. Leusch

Summary

Researchers exposed sediment-dwelling invertebrates, including midges and worms, to environmentally realistic concentrations of polyethylene microplastics and found significant reductions in survival, growth, and emergence rates. The study provides evidence that even at concentrations currently found in freshwater sediments, microplastics can negatively affect benthic organisms that play key roles in ecosystem functioning.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are a widespread environmental pollutant in aquatic ecosystems and have the potential to eventually sink to the sediment, where they may pose a risk to sediment-dwelling organisms. While the impacts of exposure to microplastics have been widely reported for marine biota, the effects of microplastics on freshwater organisms at environmentally realistic concentrations are largely unknown, especially for benthic organisms. Here we examined the effects of a realistic concentration of polyethylene microplastics in sediment on the growth and emergence of a freshwater organism Chironomus tepperi. We also assessed the influence of microplastic size by exposing C. tepperi larvae to four different size ranges of polyethylene microplastics (1-4, 10-27, 43-54 and 100-126 μm). Exposure to an environmentally relevant concentration of microplastics, 500 particles/kg, negatively affected the survival, growth (i.e. body length and head capsule) and emergence of C. tepperi. The observed effects were strongly dependent on microplastic size with exposure to particles in the size range of 10-27 μm inducing more pronounced effects. While growth and survival of C. tepperi were not affected by the larger microplastics (100-126 μm), a significant reduction in the number of emerged adults was observed after exposure to the largest microplastics, with the delayed emergence attributed to exposure to a stressor. While scanning electron microscopy showed a significant reduction in the size of the head capsule and antenna of C. tepperi exposed to microplastics in the 10-27 μm size range, no deformities to the external structure of the antenna and mouth parts in organisms exposed to the same size range of microplastics were observed. These results indicate that environmentally relevant concentrations of microplastics in sediment induce harmful effects on the development and emergence of C. tepperi, with effects greatly dependent on particle size.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper