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A short review on the recent method development for extraction and identification of microplastics in mussels and fish, two major groups of seafood

Authors :
Walter Dellisanti
Matthew Ming-Lok Leung
Karen Wing-Kei Lam
Youji Wang
Menghong Hu
Hoi Shing Lo
James Kar Hei Fang
Source :
Marine pollution bulletin. 186
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The prevalence of microplastics in the marine environment poses potential health risks to humans through seafood consumption. Relevant data are available but the diverse analytical approaches adopted to characterise microplastics have hampered data comparison among studies. Here, the techniques for extraction and identification of microplastics are summarised among studies of marine mussels and fish, two major groups of seafood. Among the reviewed papers published in 2018-2021, the most common practice to extract microplastics was through tissue digestion in alkaline chemicals (46 % for mussels, 56 % for fish) and oxidative chemicals (28 % for mussels, 12 % for fish). High-density solutions such as sodium chloride could be used to isolate microplastics from other undigested residues by flotation. Polymer analysis of microplastics was mainly carried out with Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy (58 % for both mussels and fish) and Raman spectroscopy (14 % for mussels, 8 % for fish). Among these methods, we recommend alkaline digestion for microplastic extraction, and the automated mapping approach of FTIR or Raman spectroscopy for microplastic identification. Overall, this study highlights the need for a standard protocol for characterising microplastics in seafood samples.

Details

ISSN :
18793363
Volume :
186
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine pollution bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a057a6453a7cc25fcdee115134bdf8b7