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Marine & Wildlife
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Amberstripe scad Decapterus muroadsi (Carangidae) fish ingest blue microplastics resembling their copepod prey along the coast of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) in the South Pacific subtropical gyre
The Science of The Total Environment2017
643 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 50
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Martín Thiel
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Nicolas C. Ory,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Summary
Researchers found that amberstripe scad fish from a Pacific reef selectively ingested blue microplastic fragments, suggesting that visual cues — specifically color — may drive fish to ingest plastic items that resemble natural prey.
An increasing number of studies have described the presence of microplastics (≤5mm) in many different fish species, raising ecological concerns. The factors influencing the ingestion of microplastics by fish remain unclear despite their importance to a better understanding of the routes of microplastics through marine food webs. Here, we compare microplastics and planktonic organisms in surface waters and as food items of 20 Amberstripe scads (Decapterus muroadsi) captured along the coast of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) to assess the hypothesis that fish ingest microplastics resembling their natural prey. Sixteen (80%) of the scad had ingested one to five microplastics, mainly blue polyethylene fragments that were similar in colour and size to blue copepod species consumed by the same fish. These results suggest that planktivorous fish, as a consequence of their feeding behaviour as visual predators, are directly exposed to floating microplastics. This threat may be exacerbated in the clear oceanic waters of the subtropical gyres, where anthropogenic litter accumulates in great quantity. Our study highlights the menace of microplastic contamination on the integrity of fragile remote ecosystems and the urgent need for efficient plastic waste management.