AI Article Synopsis

  • Marine microplastics (MPs), particularly polystyrene (PS), are ingested and egested by Pacific oysters (Crasostrea gigas), with a significant portion being retained after 7 days of exposure to 300 n/L of PS.
  • Ingestion peaked within 6 hours, with up to 60.4% of the PS ingested, while the maximum ingestion capacity was calculated at 73.0 n/g wet weight.
  • Smaller PS MPs (<50 μm) were found to have higher ingestion and egestion rates compared to larger sizes, suggesting that smaller particles pose a greater risk to human health via maricultural products, although depuration could mitigate this risk.

Article Abstract

Marine microplastics (MPs) pose a risk to human health through accumulation in maricultural organisms, particularly bivalves. Various studies have reported the presence of MP particles in Pacific oysters (Crasostrea gigas). In this study, we investigated the size-specific ingestion and egestion of polystyrene (PS) MPs by Pacific oysters. The cultivation density of C. gigas was maintained at 1 L of filtered seawater per oyster (n = 5) during the MP ingestion and egestion experiments. On exposure to 300 n/L of PS MP fragments for 7 d, 60.4% of the PS was ingested within 6 h (7.25 × 10 ± 1.36 × 10 n/indv.), and the ingestion was saturated at 12 h (1.2 × 10 ± 2.2 × 10 n/indv.) in C. gigas. The maximum MP ingestion capacity (Ig) of a single Pacific oyster was 73.0 ± 16.3 n/g wet weight. Further, 62.9% of the PS MP particles were egested for 7 d from the saturated single C. gigas. Ingestion and egestion varied according to the PS MP size. In the case of <50 μm PS MP, ingestion rate was low but MP amount and net-ingestion efficiency was significantly higher than other PS MP sizes. In addition, egestion, egestion rate, and net-egestion efficiency for <50 μm PS MPs were significantly higher than other PS MP sizes. Therefore, smaller MPs (<50 μm) normally exhibit the highest ingestion and egestion rates; therefore, the 50-300 μm size fraction exhibited the highest residual possibility (particles >1000 μm were excluded). Additionally, considering the net-egestion efficiency, the most economical and efficient depuration period was 24 h. This study clarifies the size-specific MP accumulation in oysters, and the egestion results suggest that the potential risk of MPs to human health through the intake of maricultural products could be reduced by depuration.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119217DOI Listing

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