| Literature DB >> 32249839 |
Egle Kelpsiene1,2, Oscar Torstensson3, Mikael T Ekvall4,5, Lars-Anders Hansson4,5, Tommy Cedervall3,5.
Abstract
Plastics are widely used in todays society leading to an accelerating amount of plastic waste entering natural ecosystems. Over time these waste products degrade to micro- and, eventually, nanoplastic particles. Therefore, the break-down of plastics may become a critical threat to aquatic ecosystems and several short term studies have demonstrated acute toxicity of nanoplastics on aquatic organisms. However, our knowledge about effects of chronic or life-time exposure on freshwater invertebrates remains elusive. Here, we demonstrate results from life-time exposure (103 days) of a common freshwater invertebrate, Daphnia magna, exposed to sub-lethal concentrations of polystyrene nanoparticles. 53 nm positively charged aminated polystyrene particles were lethal at concentration of 0.32 mg/L which is two magnitudes lower than previously used concentrations in short-term (24 h) tests. At this concentration the life-time of individuals was shortened almost three times. Negatively charged carboxylated 26 and 62 nm polystyrene particles, previously demonstrated to be non-toxic at 25 and 50 mg/L concentrations in short-term tests, were toxic to D. magna at all concentrations used in our long-term study. Although total reproductive output was not significantly affected at increasing concentrations of polystyrene nanoparticles, there was a decreasing trend in the number of offspring over their life-time. Hence, in order to understand how the potential future environmental problem of nanoplastic particles may affect biota, long-term or life-time studies resembling environmental concentrations should be performed in order to provide information for predictions of future scenarios in natural aquatic environments.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32249839 PMCID: PMC7136239 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-63028-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic representation of long-term toxicity test. In total, there were ten replicates in each treatment. During the exposure to polystyrene nanoparticles, alive Daphnia magna individuals were transferred every third day to 100 mL glass beakers with 80 mL total volume of fresh medium, containing 2.5 mL of food (algae), with (treatment) or without (control) particles. Nanoparticles were dialyzed prior the experiments and particle sizes were measured during exposure using DLS. Algae concentration and water pH values were measured every time D. magna was transferred.
Figure 2Survival of Daphnia magna exposed to different concentrations of 53 nm PS-NH2 throughout their life-time. Asterisk indicates significant difference compared to the control group estimated over the whole study period, **p < 0.01.
Figure 3Survival of Daphnia magna exposed to 62 nm PS-COOH (a) and 26 nm PS-COOH (b) particles throughout their life-time. Asterisks indicate significant differences throughout the study period compared to the control group, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01. Asterisks added on the control group indicate that all treatments were significantly different from the control group.
Figure 4Comparison of Daphnia magna survival during life-time exposure to 53 nm PS-NH2, 62 nm PS-COOH and 26 nm PS-COOH at 0.32 mg/L. Asterisk indicates significant difference compared to the control group throughout the study period, *p < 0.05.
Characteristics for particles used.
| Surface modification | Diameter size (nm) | Concentration (mg/L) | Specific surface area (μm2/mg) | Particles/mL (at concentration of 0.32 mg/L) | Surface charge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aminated (-NH2) | 53 | 0.32, 0.032, 0.0032 | 1.11 × 1011 | 3.91 × 109 | Positive |
| Carboxylated (-COOH) | 26 | 3.2, 0.32 | 2.21 × 1011 | 3.31 × 1010 | Negative |
| 62 | 7.6, 3.2, 0.76, 0.32 | 9.29 × 1010 | 2.44× 109 |