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Experimental Evaluation of Seaweeds as a Vector for Microplastics into Marine Food Webs

Environmental Science & Technology 2015 329 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.
Antonia Eckerlebe, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Antonia Eckerlebe, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Antonia Eckerlebe, Antonia Eckerlebe, Antonia Eckerlebe, Antonia Eckerlebe, Antonia Eckerlebe, Antonia Eckerlebe, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Luis Giménez, Lars Gutow, Antonia Eckerlebe, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Luis Giménez, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Antonia Eckerlebe, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski Lars Gutow, Reinhard Saborowski

Summary

Laboratory experiments demonstrated that microplastics can adhere to the surface of seaweed and be ingested by the common periwinkle when it feeds on the seaweed. This previously overlooked pathway — plastic transfer via algal feeding — may explain how benthic grazers that don't feed directly in the water column are exposed to microplastic contamination.

Body Systems

The ingestion of microplastics has been shown for a great variety of marine organisms. However, benthic marine mesoherbivores such as the common periwinkle Littorina littorea have been largely disregarded in studies about the effects of microplastics on the marine biota, probably because the pathway for microplastics to this functional group of organisms was not obvious. In laboratory experiments we showed that the seaweed Fucus vesiculosus retains suspended microplastics on its surface. The numbers of microplastics that adhered to the algae correlated with the concentrations of suspended particles in the water. In choice feeding assays L. littorea did not distinguish between algae with adherent microplastics and clean algae without microplastics, indicating that the snails do not recognize solid nonfood particles in the submillimeter size range as deleterious. In periwinkles that were feeding on contaminated algae, microplastics were found in the stomach and in the gut. However, no microplastics were found in the midgut gland, which is the principle digestive organ of gastropods. Microplastics in the fecal pellets of the periwinkles indicate that the particles do not accumulate rapidly inside the animals but are mostly released with the feces. Our results provide the first evidence that seaweeds may represent an efficient pathway for microplastics from the water to marine benthic herbivores.

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