Journal
MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2021.105260
Keywords
Microplastics; Algae; Microzooplankton; Ciliates; Sterkiella; Microplastic repackaging; Polystyrene; Ingestion; Grazing
Funding
- Government of the Principality of Monaco
- Swedish Government through an IAEA Peaceful Uses Initiative (PUI)
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Research shows that ciliates may preferentially ingest microplastics over algal food, and can repackage them into fecal pellets to introduce microplastics into different compartments of the marine food web, potentially impacting marine ecosystems.
Microplastic (MP) particles are pollutants of global concern and are ubiquitously distributed in the ocean by physical and biological processes. It has been shown that zooplankton can ingest MP yet the interaction between ciliates and MP is still poorly understood. The discrimination and preferential uptake of MP rather than algal prey by ciliates was assessed in this study. The ciliate Sterkiella sp. was fed a diet that consisted of only Isochrysis galbana or a mixture of the same algae and similarly sized polyethylene beads in a 1:3 ratio. Significant, preferential MP grazing was observed in the Plastic-Algae treatment, which is the first reported evidence of protozooplankton preferentially ingesting MP over algal food. The mixed treatment contained fecal pellets with embedded MP. Preferential uptake of MP suggests that Sterkiella sp. is capable of ingesting and then ?repackaging? MP that would otherwise be too small for larger taxa. This process would thus offer a mechanism for the reintroduction of MP into different compartments of the marine food web. As a consequence, it is necessary to account for small-sized MP (<5 ?m) particles, that may have additional and yet unknown, impacts on marine food webs.
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