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Microplastics accumulation in functional feeding guilds and functional habit groups of freshwater macrobenthic invertebrates: Novel insights in a riverine ecosystem
- Source :
- The Science of the total environment. 804
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Microplastics pose a major threat for aquatic ecosystems, but the contamination dynamics in organisms inhabiting freshwater ecosystems is still little studied. Largely used for biomonitoring, macrobenthic invertebrates provide a pivotal trophic resource for many fish and bird species. In this study, we investigated the microplastics contamination in a macrobenthic invertebrate community (2772 individuals belonging to 33 taxa identified) in a high-plain riverine ecosystem (Vipacco River, northeast Italy) and compared the amount of microplastics accumulated in functional feeding guilds/functional habit groups. Microplastics (cellulosic fibers associated with polyester) were found in 48.5% of the taxa, with the highest amount detected in the collector-gatherers, followed by predators. The collector-gatherers showed a significantly higher microplastic accumulation than the other functional feeding guilds, whereas there was no difference among the functional habit groups. The main source of microplastics pollution was most likely urban wastewater discharge points located along the river. Our study reports a novel approach about microplastic pollution assessment in lotic environments, as it focuses into the microplastic contamination dynamics in an entire macrobenthic invertebrate community perspective and underlines the need for further study.
- Subjects :
- Polyester
Microplastics
Environmental Engineering
River ecosystem
Cellulose
Collector-gatherers
Fibers Freshwater ecosystems
Lotic ecosystems
Fresh Water
Biology
Freshwater ecosystem
Fibers Freshwater ecosystem
Habits
Biomonitoring
Environmental Chemistry
Animals
Humans
Ecosystem
Waste Management and Disposal
Lotic ecosystem
Invertebrate
Trophic level
Ecology
Aquatic ecosystem
Pollution
Invertebrates
Collector-gatherer
Plastics
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Environmental Monitoring
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18791026
- Volume :
- 804
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Science of the total environment
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d6535c71e1e931d7092ce4a8fe35924f