AI Article Synopsis

  • Microplastics are everywhere in aquatic environments, and while we know they harm individual aquatic species, their effects on whole communities and food webs are not well understood.
  • This study develops a model to analyze how microplastics affect fish communities, finding that their impact can lead to species extinction, which varies based on individual species characteristics and how much microplastic they ingest.
  • The research shows that low-level species eating microplastics can significantly harm overall community biomass, highlighting the need for targeted risk assessments to understand species-specific vulnerabilities and their ecological roles.

Article Abstract

Microplastics are pervasive throughout aquatic ecological communities. While their negative impacts on the life history traits of aquatic species are well studied, the effects on community dynamics remain elusive. Consequently, community-level assessments of microplastic effects on marine food webs are largely lacking, creating significant knowledge gaps regarding marine ecosystem structure and dynamics in the context of microplastic contamination. Here we expand a multispecies size-spectrum model by incorporating microplastic impacts on individual life-history traits, ultimately allowing us to study microplastic-mediated structural and functional changes in fish communities. As expected, microplastic ingestion may drive species extinction, but the microplastic-to-food ratio threshold for extinction is species-specific, and not necessarily correlated with species' asymptotic weights. Interestingly, species responses to microplastics also propagate through the community as ingestion triggers both bottom-up and top-down effects on community dynamics. Which specific type of cascading effect is dominating depends on which species is ingesting microplastics as well as its trophic role in the community. Generally, low-trophic-level species ingesting microplastics can exert large detrimental effects on community biomass. Thus, this study highlights the necessity for a comprehensive risk assessment of species-specific responses to microplastic contamination as well as an understanding of individual species' role in their communities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.136067DOI Listing

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