| Literature DB >> 35484203 |
Austin D Gray1, John E Weinstein2, Rachelle C Riegerix3.
Abstract
Due to the ubiquity of microplastic contamination in coastal waters, there is potential for adverse impacts to organism development. One organism of interest is the daggerblade grass shrimp, Palaemon pugio, an ecologically important species in estuaries along the east coast of North America. We exposed larval grass shrimp to virgin polyethylene microbeads (35 and 58 µm) at a high (0.375 and 1.95 mg/L), medium (0.0375 and 0.195 mg/L), and a low concentration (0.00375 and 0.0195 mg/L), respectively for 23 days to assess mortality, transformation time from larval to juvenile stage, and weight. Average percent mortality was 3.7 to 4.8 times higher in the experimental treatments compared to controls. The greatest proportion of mortality was observed in the first 11 days. Median time for transformation ranged from 20.2 to 20.8 days. Shrimp exposed to the 35 µm beads in the high treatment (20.2 days) transformed significantly faster than the control shrimp (20.8 days). Although development was not delayed and size of the shrimp did not differ, the acute toxicity of microplastics on grass shrimp is a concern due to their role in energy cycling within tidal-creeks. These findings suggest potential population and community level effects following microplastic exposure.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35484203 PMCID: PMC9051112 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-10999-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Percent mortality of shrimp from size treatments. (A) 35 µm treatment and (B) 58 µm treatment. Experimental treatments were statistically compared to control treatments. *Denoted p-value that is < 0.05. **denotes p-values that is < 0.01. ns = not significant.
Figure 2Toxicity curve graph showing the proportion of shrimp that died over the 23-day exposure relative to the initial concentration. (A) Depicts the proportion from the 35 µm exposure and (B) depicts the proportion from the 58 µm exposure.
Median transformation time (MTT) and 95% confidence intervals for the 35 and 58 µm polyethylene microspheres treatments.
| Treatment | MTT (days)—35 µm | MTT (days)—58 µm |
|---|---|---|
| Control | 20.8 days (20.5–21.0 days) | 20.8 days (20.5–21.0 days) |
| Low | 20.6 days (20.3–20.9 days) | 20.5 days (20.3–20.7 days) |
| Medium | 20.9 days (20.6–21.2) | 20.5 days (20.3–20.7) |
| High | 20.2 days (20.0–20.5 days)* | 20.6 days (20.4–20.8 days) |
*Denotes transformation treatment that was significantly faster than the control.
Figure 3Mean weights of shrimp from size treatments. (A) the 35 µm exposure and (B) the 58 µm exposure along with control weights. We observed no difference in shrimp weights among the three treatments and the control for both particle sizes.