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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Effects of polystyrene microplastics on early stages of two marine invertebrates with different feeding strategies

Environmental Pollution 2017 191 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.
Silvia Messinetti, Michela Sugni Silvia Messinetti, Silvia Messinetti, Silvia Messinetti, Silvia Messinetti, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Roberta Pennati, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Silvia Mercurio, Silvia Mercurio, Silvia Mercurio, Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Silvia Mercurio, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Roberta Pennati, Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni Michela Sugni Roberta Pennati, Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni Silvia Mercurio, Roberta Pennati, Roberta Pennati, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Marco Parolini, Michela Sugni

Summary

Researchers exposed early life stages of two marine invertebrates to polystyrene microplastics to measure effects on development and survival. The study found that even early life stages are vulnerable to microplastic exposure, raising concerns about impacts on marine invertebrate populations.

Polymers

Nowadays, microplastics represent one of the main threats to marine ecosystems, being able to affect organisms at different stages of their life cycle and at different levels of the food web. Although the presence of plastic debris has been reported in different habitats and the ability to ingest it has been confirmed for different taxa, few studies have been performed to elucidate the effects on survival and development of marine animals. Thus, we explored the effects of different environmental concentrations of polystyrene microbeads on the early stages of two invertebrate species widespread in the Mediterranean shallow waters: the pelagic planktotrophic pluteus larvae of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus and the filter-feeding sessile juveniles of the ascidian Ciona robusta. We evaluated the effects on larvae and juvenile development and determined the efficiency of bead ingestion. The feeding stages of both species proved to be extremely efficient in ingesting microplastics. In the presence of microbeads, the metamorphosis of ascidian juveniles was slowed down and development of plutei altered. These results prompted the necessity to monitor the populations of coastal invertebrates since microplastics affect sensitive stages of life cycle and may have consequences on generation recruitment.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper