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Foraging preferences influence microplastic ingestion by six marine fish species from the Texas Gulf Coast

Marine Pollution Bulletin 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.
Colleen A. Peters, Peyton A. Thomas, Kaitlyn B. Rieper, Susan Power Bratton

Summary

Researchers analyzed 1,381 fish from six Gulf Coast species and found microplastics — predominantly fibers — in 42% of individuals, with ingestion patterns reflecting the foraging ecology of each species. The results show that diet and habitat use strongly shape a fish's exposure to microplastic pollution.

This study evaluated the influence of foraging preferences on microplastic ingestion by six marine fish species from the Texas Gulf Coast. A total of 1381 fish were analyzed and 42.4% contained ingested microplastic, inclusive of fiber (86.4%), microbead (12.9% %), and fragment (<1.0%) forms. Despite a substantial overlap in diet, ordination of ingested prey items clustered samples into distinctive species groupings, reflective of the foraging gradient among species. Orthopristis chrysoptera displayed the lowest overall frequency of microplastic ingestion and the most distinctive ordination grouping, indicating their selective invertebrate foraging preferences. Cluster analysis of O. chrysoptera most closely classified microplastic with the ingestion of benthic invertebrates, whereas the ingestion of microplastic by all other species most closely classified with the ingestion of vegetation and shrimp. O. chrysoptera, as selective invertebrate foragers, are less likely to ingest microplastics than species exhibiting generalist foraging preferences and methods of prey capture.

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