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

Evaluation of microplastics in Jurujuba Cove, Niterói, RJ, Brazil, an area of mussels farming

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2016 125 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Mônica Regina da Costa Marques, Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Melanie Lopes da Silva, Melanie Lopes da Silva, Melanie Lopes da Silva, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Rebeca Oliveira Castro, Fábio Vieira de Araújo Mônica Regina da Costa Marques, Mônica Regina da Costa Marques, Melanie Lopes da Silva, Mônica Regina da Costa Marques, Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Fábio Vieira de Araújo Mônica Regina da Costa Marques, Fábio Vieira de Araújo

Summary

Researchers assessed microplastic contamination in waters of Jurujuba Cove, Brazil — an active mussel farming area — across wet and dry seasons, finding high concentrations of diverse synthetic polymers in both seasons and concluding that areas with such contamination levels pose a risk to consumers of farmed shellfish.

Once non-biodegradable, microplastics remain on the environment absorbing toxic hydrophobic compounds making them a risk to biodiversity when ingested or filtered by organisms and entering in the food chain. To evaluate the potential of the contamination by microplastics in mussels cultivated in Jurujuba Cove, Niterói, RJ, waters of three stations were collected during a rain and dry seasons using a plankton net and later filtered. Microplastics were quantified and characterized morphologically and chemically. The results showed a high concentration of microplastics in both seasons with diversity of colors, types and sizes. Synthetic polymers were present in all samples. The presence of microplastics was probably due to a high and constant load of effluent that this area receives and to the mussel farming activity that use many plastic materials. Areas with high concentrations of microplastics could not be used for mussel cultivation due to the risk of contamination to consumers.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper