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. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Floating Microplastics with Biofilm Changes Feeding Behavior of Climbing Perch Anabas testudineus

Microplastics 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Е. В. Ганжа, Tran Đuc Dien, Е. Д. Павлов

Summary

Researchers investigated the feeding behaviour of climbing perch (Anabas testudineus) in response to floating expanded polystyrene pellets bearing biofilms of different ages and found that biofilm development altered fish feeding responses. Fish preferentially ingested biofilm-covered pellets over pristine ones, suggesting that microbial colonisation of plastic debris increases ingestion risk.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The climbing perch, Anabas testudineus, is one of the most widely distributed freshwater amphibious fishes in South and Southeast Asia, inhabiting both natural and artificial water bodies polluted by plastic waste. Current mesocosm experimental study aimed to investigate behavioral responses of wild fish to floating expanded polystyrene (EPS) pellets, with a focus on the biofilm developing on their surface. For biofilm formation, the pellets (diameter 3–4 mm) were exposed for two, six, and fourteen days in an irrigation canal inhabited by climbing perch. Development of an intensive biofilm was observed on days 6 and 14 of exposure, characterized by a high diversity of organisms, including protozoa, cyanobacteria, algae, amoebae, and fungi. Fish feeding behavior was observed in the presence of feed pellets, clean EPS pellets, and three variants of EPS pellets with biofilm developed on their surfaces in the freshwater environment. The fish rapidly grasped and ingested feed pellets compared to all variants of plastic pellets. Climbing perch grasped all types of EPS pellets but always rejected them after oral cavity testing. The time to the first grasp was significantly longer for both clean EPS and EPS exposed for two days compared to feed pellets. Biofilm appeared to function as a taste deterrent for the fish: the duration of oral cavity testing was negatively correlated with the EPS pellet exposure timings in natural conditions. We suggest that floating plastic stimulates foraging behavior in the fish, and the duration of this behavior was significantly longer than that observed with feed pellets. The similarity of positive buoyant EPS pellets to natural food objects may stimulate the fish movements towards the water surface, which likely results in greater energy expenditure and increased risk of predation, without any apparent benefit to the individual.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic pollution in aquatic environments may facilitate misfeeding by fish

Researchers found that biofilm growth on polystyrene microplastic surfaces, developed over weeks of freshwater exposure, significantly increased misfeeding behavior in goldfish even in the presence of genuine food, suggesting that biofouling makes microplastics more attractive to fish and helps explain widespread ingestion observed in aquatic animals.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic pollution in aquatic environments may facilitate misfeeding by fish

Researchers found that biofilm formation on microplastic surfaces in freshwater environments facilitates fish misidentification of plastics as food, with the probability of capture increasing significantly as biofilm aging progressed over weeks.

Article Tier 2

Enhanced Fish Feeding Tendency toward Poly(vinyl chloride) Microplastics Colonized by Luminescent Bacteria

Researchers found that fish showed enhanced feeding tendency toward PVC microplastics colonized by specific biofilm communities, suggesting that the microbial coating makes plastic particles more attractive as food, potentially increasing voluntary ingestion of microplastics by fish in natural environments.

Article Tier 2

The effect of planktivorous fish (juvenile Perca fluviatilis) on the taxonomic diversity of microplastic particles-colonized bacterial community

Researchers tested whether the presence of perch (a common freshwater fish) affects the bacterial communities colonizing microplastic particles in water. Fish exudates — waste products released into the water — significantly increased the abundance and diversity of bacteria growing on both polyethylene and polystyrene surfaces, which could eventually accelerate microbial degradation of the plastics. This has implications for understanding the long-term fate of microplastics in natural lake and river environments where fish and plastic debris coexist.

Article Tier 2

The role of microbe-microplastic associations in marine Nematode feeding behaviors

Researchers found that microbial biofilms growing on microplastics influenced marine nematode feeding behavior, with nematodes showing preferential consumption of biofilm-coated particles, suggesting that microbial colonization plays a key role in why organisms ingest microplastics.

Share this paper