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Is blue mussel caging an efficient method for monitoring environmental microplastics pollution?

Authors :
Kazour, Maria
Amara, Rachid
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Mar2020, Vol. 710, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The effectiveness of mussel caging for active microplastics (MPs) biomonitoring was investigated for the first time by comparing abundance and characteristics (shape, size, color and type of polymers) of MPs ingested by caged depurated blue mussels with those ingested by native mussels collected at the same sites and with those found in their surrounding environment (surface water and sediments). Mussels were exposed along a pollution gradient originating from a wastewater treatment plant discharge and near an abandoned coastal landfill. After 6 weeks of deployment, the majority (93%) of clean transplanted mussels had ingested MPs with a mean number of items ranging from 0.61 to 1.67 items/g. The occurrence, abundance and properties of MPs ingested by caged mussels were similar to those found in native mussels. Among the debris items detected in caged and native mussels, fragments were the most predominant type, consistent with the MPs found in their surrounding environment. MPs sizes were very similar whether in the water, sediments and both caged and native mussels, with a dominance of items <150 μm. Although some polymers were under-represented or totally absent in the caged mussels compared to overlying seawater or surrounding sediment, there was a good overlap in polymer types proportion being found between caged mussels and sediments (Morisita's index of similarity = 0.93) or seawater (0.86). Polystyrene dominated all samples in all the different matrices. Our study suggests that blue mussels caging may be a promising tool for MPs biomonitoring making monitoring more reliable with an accurate assessment of the biological effects of MPs over a predetermined exposure period. However, further methodological improvements should be considered to define a uniform protocol for blue mussels caging to allow spatial and temporal microplastics active biomonitoring. Unlabelled Image • The effectiveness of using caged blue mussels for MPs biomonitoring is evaluated. • Quantitative and qualitative similarity in MPs ingested by caged and native mussels • Good similarity overlap in MPs size, color and polymers types between all matrices • Highest polymer similarity overlap between caged mussels and sediments • Blue mussels caging is a promising tool for MPs biomonitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
710
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141582683
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.135649