AI Article Synopsis

  • Microplastic pollution poses significant risks to freshwater and marine life, including the critically endangered European eel, by causing physical damage and toxicity.
  • Research highlighted that young eels entering rivers already contain marine microplastics and accumulate more from freshwater sources, indicating a concerning pattern of pollution.
  • The study suggests a need for local monitoring and policies to reduce microplastics in aquatic environments to protect vulnerable species like diadromous fish.

Article Abstract

Microplastic pollution affects freshwater and marine biota worldwide, microplastics occurring even inside the organisms. With highly variable effects, from physical damage to toxicity of plastic compounds, microplastics are a potential threat to the biodiversity, community composition and organisms' health. This emerging pollutant could overstress diadromous species, which are exposed to both sea and river water in their life cycle. Here we have quantified microplastics in young European eel Anguilla anguilla, a critically endangered catadromous fish, entering three rivers in southwestern Bay of Biscay. River water, sediments and seawater were also analysed for microplastics. The microplastic type was identified using Fournier-Transform Infrared spectroscopy and then searched for their hazard potential at the European Chemical Agency site. Both riverine and sea microplastic pollution were predictors of eels' microplastic profile (types of microplastics by shape and colour): A. anguilla juveniles entering European rivers already carry some marine microplastics and acquire more from river water. Potentially hazardous plastic materials were found from eels, some of them dangerous for aquatic life following the European Chemical Agency. This confirms microplastics as a potential threat for the species. Between-rivers differences for microplastics profiles persistent over years highlight the convenience of analysing and preventing microplastics at a local spatial scale, to save diadromous species from this stressor. Since the origin of microplastics present in glass eels seems to be dual (continental + seawater), new policies should be promoted to limit the entry of microplastics in sea and river waters.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119277DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

microplastics
12
diadromous species
12
river water
12
critically endangered
8
anguilla anguilla
8
microplastic pollution
8
microplastics potential
8
potential threat
8
sea river
8
european chemical
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!