| Literature DB >> 34465061 |
Ana L Patrício Silva1, Joana C Prata2, Catherine Mouneyrac3, Damià Barcelò4, Armando C Duarte2, Teresa Rocha-Santos2.
Abstract
The use of disposable face masks became essential to fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting in an unprecedented rise in their production and, unfortunately, to a new form of environmental contamination due to improper disposal. Recent publications reported the abundance of COVID-19-related litter in several environments, wildlife interaction with such items, and the contaminants that can be released from such protective equipment that has the potential to induce ecotoxicological effects. This paper provides a critical review of COVID-19 face mask occurrence in diverse environments and their adverse physiological and ecotoxicological effects on wildlife. It also outlines potential remediation strategies to mitigate the environmental challenge impose by COVID-19-related litter.Entities:
Keywords: Animal health; Disposable masks; Ecotoxicity; Microplastics; Physiology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34465061 PMCID: PMC8217904 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.148505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963
Fig. 1Potential effects of disposable facemasks in aquatic and terrestrial organisms.
Occurrence and density of disposable face masks during COVID-19 pandemic in urbanised and natural environments.
| Location | Sampling sites | Number of items | Observations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lima; Peru | 11 beaches | 138 items (7.44 × 10−4 items/m2), 66.4% representing disposable masks (surgical, KN95) | Recreational beaches presented the highest number of items (73%), followed by surfing (24.6%), fishing and inaccessible beaches (< 1%). | |
| Soko island; Japan | 100 m beach | 70 disposable masks (7 × 10−3 items/m2) | ||
| Kwale, Kilifi, Mombasa; Kenya | Beaches (sediments and water), and streets | Streets: 0.01 item/m | Mombasa presented a higher number of masks in the streets; Kwale beaches presented more items than Kilifi. | |
| Jacarta bay; Indonesia | Cilincing and Marunda river mouths | 4500–5000 items (~254.7–246 items/day), 5.36–4.92% representing face masks | COVID-19 waste increased 5% the debris found in riverine sediments. | |
| Toronto; Canada | Parking lots, hospitals, | 1306 items, 31% representing face masks. Parking lots and hospitals (1.60–1.33 × 10−3/m2) | Parking lots and hospitals had higher numbers of face masks. | |
| Cox's Bazar; Bangladesh | One beach (13 sampling sites; 12 weeks) | 6.29 × 10−4 /m2, 97.9% representing face masks | ||
| Bushehr, Iran | Sandy beaches (S1, S4, S7-S9) | 1578 face masks and 804 gloves were found over a cumulative area of 43,577 m2 during 40 days | S4, S5, S7 (most populated beaches) were the most polluted sites |
Summary of the adverse effects microfibres (from polymers found on disposable face masks; i.e., PE, PP, PA, PET, polyesters) on wildlife (as reviewed by Kutralam-Muniasamy et al., 2020; Singh et al., 2020).
| Test organism | Polymer & size | Exposure conditions | Ecotoxicological effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP (500 um) obtained from ropes | Up to 2 mg; 30 days | Reduction in feeding activity | ||
| PE and PP (20–70 × 20 Ø um) obtained from a 3 y old rope | Up to 90 items/mL; 30 days | Compromised growth and reproduction | ||
| PA (500 × 20 Ø um) | Up to 13,380 items/cm; up to 16 h | Reduction in the food intake | ||
| PET (62–1400 × 31–528 Ø um) obtained from a PET fabric | Up to 100 mg/L; 48 h | Increased mortality | ||
| PP (3–5 mm × 0.2 Ø mm) obtained from ropes | 5 items included in 1.5 g of squid; 8 months | Compromised feeding rate, body mass, and metabolic rate | ||
| Polyester (100–400 um) obtained from clothing | Up to 3.4 × 104 items/L; 1 and 8 days | Physiological deformities, compromised reproduction. | ||
| PET (< 5 mm) obtained from pink PET fleece | 30 items/ mL; up to 72 h | Compromised filtration rates | ||
| PP (1 mm) obtained from rope | 3 items every 4 days; 71 days | Adult mortality and adverse embryonic development | ||
| Nylon and PET (10 × 4 μm; 23 × 100 μm; 17 × 60 μm; 23 × 70 μm) purchased from Goodfellow | 100 items/ mL; 24 h | Compromised feeding activity, alteration in sinking rates | ||
| Nylon, polyester and PP (50–1000 × 30 Ø um) obtained from fluorescent ropes | 10 mg/L (~121 ± 28 items); 72 h | Alteration in intestinal metabolism and gut microbiota, increased inflammation. | ||
| PP (20–100 × 20 Ø um) obtained from containers | 20 mg/L; 24 h | Intestine alterations, gut inflammation, and metabolism disruption. Gut microbiota dysbiosis. | ||
| Polyester (63–150 um) obtained from fabric | 50,000 items/L; 96 h | No effects on survival and bacterial infection (for polyester). | ||
| Polyester (361–387 × 40 Ø um) obtained from cushion | 0, 0.1 and 1.0% | ALtered burrowing and feeding behaviour, molecular genetic biomarkers. | ||
| PET (1257 × 76.3 Ø um) | 0.01–0.71 g/kg; 28 days | Reduction in food intake and excretion, damage in the gastrointestinal walls, oxidative stress. | ||
| PP obtained from PPE microfibres | 1000 mg/kg dry soil; 28 days | Ingestion/egestion observed, reproduction and growth decreased by 48% and 92%, respectively, no biochemical and behavioural alterations | ||
| PP obtained from PPE microfibres | 1000 mg/kg dry soil; 21 days | Biochemical alterations (esterase activity dropped 62%; spermatogenesis declined to 0.8). No effects on survival and absence of pathological symptoms |