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Ingestion of Nanoplastics and Microplastics by Pacific Oyster Larvae

Environmental Science & Technology 2015 588 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Matthew Cole, Tamara S. Galloway Tamara S. Galloway

Summary

Researchers tested whether Pacific oyster larvae could ingest nanoplastics and microplastics, and what effects this had on their development. They found that larvae consumed plastics as small as 100 nanometers, and exposure to the smallest particles significantly reduced larval growth and survival. The study highlights that the earliest life stages of commercially important shellfish may be especially vulnerable to nanoplastic pollution in coastal waters.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Plastic debris is a prolific contaminant effecting freshwater and marine ecosystems across the globe. Of growing environmental concern are "microplastics"and "nanoplastics" encompassing tiny particles of plastic derived from manufacturing and macroplastic fragmentation. Pelagic zooplankton are susceptible to consuming microplastics, however the threat posed to larvae of commercially important bivalves is currently unknown. We exposed Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) larvae (3-24 d.p.f.) to polystyrene particles spanning 70 nm-20 μm in size, including plastics with differing surface properties, and tested the impact of microplastics on larval feeding and growth. The frequency and magnitude of plastic ingestion over 24 h varied by larval age and size of polystyrene particle (ANOVA, P < 0.01), and surface properties of the plastic, with aminated particles ingested and retained more frequently (ANOVA, P < 0.01). A strong, significant correlation between propensity for plastic consumption and plastic load per organism was identified (Spearmans, r = 0.95, P < 0.01). Exposure to 1 and 10 μm PS for up to 8 days had no significant effect on C. gigas feeding or growth at <100 microplastics mL(-1). In conclusion, whil micro- and nanoplastics were readily ingested by oyster larvae, exposure to plastic concentrations exceeding those observed in the marine environment resulted in no measurable effects on the development or feeding capacity of the larvae over the duration of the study.

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