Journal Pre-proof Microplastics in aquatic environments: Toxicity to trigger ecological consequences Ma Hui, Pu Shengyan, Liu Shibin, Bai Yingchen, Sandip Mandal, Xing Baoshan PII:
S0269-7491(19)35364-3
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114089
Reference:
ENPO 114089
To appear in:
Environmental Pollution
Received Date: 18 September 2019 Revised Date:
20 January 2020
Accepted Date: 27 January 2020
Please cite this article as: Hui, M., Shengyan, P., Shibin, L., Yingchen, B., Mandal, S., Baoshan, X., Microplastics in aquatic environments: Toxicity to trigger ecological consequences, Environmental Pollution (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114089. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
1‐
Microplastics in Aquatic Environments: Toxicity to Trigger
2‐
Ecological Consequences
3‐
4‐
Ma Hui 1, 2, Pu Shengyan1, 3, 4,*, Liu Shibin1, Bai Yingchen3, Sandip Mandal1,
5‐
Xing Baoshan4 1
6‐
State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection
7‐
(Chengdu University of Technology), Chengdu 610059, Sichuan, China; 2
8‐
Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of Copenhagen,
9‐
Thorvaldsensvej 401871 Frederiksberg, Denmark 3
10‐
State Key Laboratory of Environmental Criteria and Risk Assessment, Chinese
11‐
Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, Beijing 100012, China 4
12‐
Stockbridge School of Agriculture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003,
13‐
United States
14‐ 15‐
Abstract
16‐
The prevalence of microplastic debris in aquatic ecosystems as a result of
17‐
anthropogenic activity has received worldwide attention. Although extensive research
18‐
has reported ubiquitous and directly adverse effects on organisms, only a few
19‐
published studies have proposed the existence of long-term ecological consequences.
20‐
The research in this field still lacks a systematic overview of the toxic effects of
21‐
microplastics and a coherent understanding of the potential ecological consequences.
22‐
Here, we draw upon cross-disciplinary scientific research from recent decades to 1)
23‐
seek to understand the correlation between the responses of organisms to
24‐
microplastics and the potential ecological disturbances, 2) summarize the potential ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Corresponding author at: State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection (Chengdu University of Technology), Chengdu 610059, PR China. Tel./fax: +86 (0) 28 8407 3253; E-mail:
[email protected];
[email protected] (S.Y. Pu);
[email protected](B. Xing) Notes: The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.
*
1‐ ‐
25‐
ecological consequences triggered by microplastics in aquatic environments, and 3)
26‐
discuss the barriers to the understanding of microplastic toxicology. In this paper, the
27‐
physiochemical characteristics and dynamic distribution of microplastics were related
28‐
to the toxicological concerns about microplastic bioavailability and environmental
29‐
perturbation. The extent of the ecological disturbances depends on how the
30‐
ecotoxicity of microplastics is transferred and proliferated throughout an aquatic
31‐
environment. Microplastics are prevalent; they interfere with nutrient productivity and
32‐
cycling, cause physiological stress in organisms (e.g., behavioral alterations, immune
33‐
responses, abnormal metabolism, and changes to energy budgets), and threaten the
34‐
ecosystem composition and stability. By integrating the linkages among the toxicities
35‐
that range from the erosion of individual species to the defective development of
36‐
biological communities to the collapse of the ecosystem functioning, this review
37‐
provides a bottom-up framework for future research to address the mechanisms
38‐
underlying the toxicity of microplastics in aquatic environments and the substantial
39‐
ecological consequences.
40‐
Keywords: Microplastics; toxic effects; aquatic environment; ecotoxicology
41‐
Table of Contents
42‐
1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................3
43‐
2. Clues from microplastic features: bioavailability and toxicity determined by
44‐
physiochemical properties ....................................................................................................................4
45‐
3. Spatial and temporal dynamics (distribution) affects the microplastic ingestion by
46‐
organisms............................................................................................................................................13
47‐
4. How will the organisms respond to the microplastic toxicity ........................................................17
48‐
5. What ecological consequence will be triggered by the microplastic disturbance?.........................22
49‐
6. The contradictory opinions for the microplastic toxicity & future research perspective ...............27
50‐
Acknowledgments .............................................................................................................................30
51‐
References ..........................................................................................................................................40
52‐ 53‐ 54‐ 2‐ ‐
55‐
1. Introduction
56‐
Plastic has become a major commodity in the modern world on an unprecedented
57‐
global scale, penetrating basically every aspect of our lives. The plastic industry
58‐
expands annually, but the consumption needs have not appeared to decrease. The total
59‐
plastic production has been estimated to reach 33 billion tons by 2050 [1]. Because
60‐
plastic is a persistent synthetic polymer, scientists started to question where all the
61‐
discharged plastic debris had gone [2]. Microplastics, which have been reported
62‐
sporadically since as early as the 1970s, are now believed to be the predominant form
63‐
of discharged plastic waste [2] and have generated considerable research interest since
64‐
2004 [3]. The disappearance of plastics suggests not only that the small plastic
65‐
particles from cosmetics, clothing and other industrial manufacturing is entering into
66‐
the aquatic environment directly (as primary microplastics) but also that the abundant
67‐
microplastics are generated from the breakdown of large plastic debris in the form of
68‐
plastic fragments, fibers, and granules (as secondary microplastics) [4, 5]. The
69‐
recognition of microplastics as a globe issue was raised from the detection of
70‐
microplastics worldwide [6, 7]. Efforts have been made to develop advanced sampling
71‐
and analytical techniques with higher accuracies in the wake of the increased research
72‐
[4, 8, 9]. After the development of these techniques, signs of stress were observed in
73‐
organisms as a result of microplastics [10-12]. Because of their small size and
74‐
ubiquity, the microplastic particles that have spread in aquatic [13, 14], terrestrial [15]
75‐
and atmospheric [16, 17] environments have high bioavailability for different species.
76‐
Evidence of microplastics has been found in the guts of benthic invertebrates, fish
77‐
[18], and larger mammals [19] from different trophic levels, and the ingested
78‐
microplastics are transferred throughout the food web, driving increasing concerns
79‐
about the threats to aquatic biota [10, 20]. Both direct and indirect evidence for the
80‐
adverse effect of microplastics have been found as a result of the interference with
81‐
fecundity and mortality and the dosage-effect relationship with physiological stress,
82‐
including behavioral alterations [21], immune responses [22], abnormal metabolism
83‐
[23], and changes in energy budgets [24].‐ 3‐ ‐
84‐
We present this particular review because, whereas the negative effect of
85‐
microplastics on organisms and the environment have been widely reported, the
86‐
potential indirect impacts on the ecosystem have received less attention, and few
87‐
published results have proposed long-term ecological consequences. However, the
88‐
question of whether the interference of microplastics is truly harmful has never been
89‐
addressed due to the ambiguous results obtained from nonstandardized research
90‐
methods and the complexity of aquatic ecosystems [25]. A comprehensive comparison
91‐
of the scattered results would be beneficial for developing a sound and overarching
92‐
framework for an improved understanding of microplastics as an anthropogenic
93‐
change in this new epoch. In this review, the most discussed physiochemical
94‐
characteristics were summarized from the perspective of the reasons that widely used
95‐
plastics become toxic pollution the aquatic environments in the form of microplastics.
96‐
By systemically summarizing the diverse toxicological effects of microplastics, the
97‐
links between the superficial phenomena and the in-depth toxicological mechanisms
98‐
were established to advance the knowledge of the potential long-lasting ecological
99‐
threats to the aquatic ecosystem, providing a comprehensive framework and guidance
100‐
for future research. In addition, the most recent research gives recommendations for
101‐
the definition of microplastics [26], but considering the nonstandardized methods in
102‐
the studies in last decade, this review chose the most frequently used definition to
103‐
encompass the largest range of microplastics, which are those under the size of 5000
104‐
µm, without further differentiation of the specific textures, shapes or compositions [27,
105‐
28].
106‐
2. Clues from the features of microplastics: bioavailability and
107‐
toxicity are determined by the physicochemical properties
108‐
In toxicological studies, the physicochemical properties of microplastics are
109‐
provided as the fundamental information, which reflects the focus of the research.
110‐
However, the inherent nature of microplastics is also related to their bioavailability
111‐
and toxicity in aquatic environments. Therefore, instead of describing the
112‐
physiochemical properties in detail, efforts will be made in this review to reveal the 4‐ ‐
113‐
influence on the ingestion preferences and biological responses of different species
114‐
and the profound ecological implications.
115‐
2.1. Physical property
116‐
Bioavailability, which is the key factor reflecting the potential influence of
117‐
microplastics on different species, depends on both the properties of the pollutant and
118‐
the foraging preferences of the organisms [29]. Unlike most selective forgers,
119‐
organisms exhibiting generalist feeding preferences and prey capture methods (e.g.,
120‐
predators only distinguish food from other substances based on limited characteristics)
121‐
are more likely to ingest microplastics with similar features to their natural prey [30].
122‐
Physical properties affect the morphology and mobility of microplastics within the
123‐
aquatic environment, which affects bioavailability by altering the distribution within
124‐
the aquatic environment, presenting a similar appearance to natural substances and
125‐
causing different extents of physical damage to the organism. The most studied
126‐
physical properties include the size, color, density and shape of microplastics, and
127‐
each of the properties contributes differently to the negative effects.
128‐
Size
129‐
Microplastics occupy the same size range as sand grains, microalgae and
130‐
plankton, which are available to a wide range of aquatic organisms, especially the
131‐
nonselective foragers [31]. The microplastic uptake rate by Daphnia magna has been
132‐
shown to have an exponential correlation with size, and the number of daphnids with
133‐
microplastics in their guts decreases with the increase in the average particle size [32].
134‐
The most frequent size of microplastic ingested by daphnids was shown to be below
135‐
100 µm, which is consistent with the food size preference of daphnids [32]. Compared
136‐
to daphnids, Artemia franciscana was shown to ingest fewer microplastic particles
137‐
under the same microplastic exposure conditions due to its smaller food feeding
138‐
preferences (< 50 µm) [33]. For the amberstripe scad Decapterus muroadsi
139‐
(Carangidae) fish, the most commonly ingested microplastics are similar in size to
140‐
their prey, at approximately 1.3 ± 0.1 mm [34]. After ingestion, the particle size is a
141‐
crucial factor determining the translocation ability of microplastics within the body of
5‐ ‐
142‐
an organism. The smaller microplastics (~3.0 µm) translocate within Mytilus edulis
143‐
more easily and readily than the larger particles (~9.6 µm) [35]. The translocation of
144‐
microplastics from the digestive tracts to other tissues within the brown shrimp
145‐
Crangon crangon (L.) was negligible when the particle size was larger than 20 µm
146‐
[36]. Thus, for this specific species, the smaller microplastics showed higher
147‐
bioavailability due to the higher ingestion rate and the translocation rate within the
148‐
organism. On the other hand, for different species, the biological responses also varied
149‐
with the diverse food size preferences and the body size of the organisms. For
150‐
instance, the 0.05 µm microplastics caused the highest toxicity for the monogonont
151‐
rotifer Brachionus koreanus because smaller microplastics have higher retention times
152‐
and thus can exert negative effects due to low egestion efficiency [37]. For
153‐
Caenorhabditis elegans, the 1.0 µm particles caused the highest lethality, maximum
154‐
accumulation, lowest Ca2+ level in the intestine and highest expression of glutathione
155‐
S-transferase 4 compared to both the larger (0.1 µm) or smaller (5.0 µm) microplastics
156‐
since the 1 µm microplastic induced severe intestinal damage [38]. The general
157‐
pattern of differing impacts of different microplastics sizes for different species
158‐
remains unclear, yet the bioavailability of microplastics is affected by the diverse
159‐
morphologies and physiological structures of organisms, which are directly related to
160‐
the ingestion likelihood, egestion rate and translocation potential. Therefore, precise
161‐
model organisms should be selected for toxicological studies based on the aims of the
162‐
research. It is also noteworthy that the controlled microplastics of uniform size that
163‐
are used in research do not align with the sizes in the actual aquatic environment. The
164‐
voluntary food intake behavior of organisms should be considered by exposing
165‐
organisms to a wider ranges of microplastic sizes. The comprehensive consideration
166‐
of both the range of microplastic sizes in the aquatic environment and the features of
167‐
the native species is critical for obtaining reliable results during ecotoxicological tests
168‐
or risk assessments.
169‐
Color Color is another aspect of microplastics that disturbs foraging by visual predators
170‐
6‐ ‐
171‐
with various ingestion biases. For instance, 80% of the amberstripe scads (Decapterus
172‐
muroadsi) in a previous study ingested mainly blue polyethylene fragments, which
173‐
presented a similar morphology in color and size with their blue copepod prey (Fig. 1)
174‐
[34]. Mostly dark colors of microplastics, especially green microplastic fibers, which
175‐
resembled marine plankton, were found in the digestive systems of flathead grey
176‐
mullet Mugil cephalus [39]. The white, clear and blue microplastics, which are similar
177‐
in color to the plankton in the area, were the most common colors of the microplastics
178‐
ingested by the planktivorous fishes in the North Pacific central gyre due to the
179‐
resemblance to the food source of the fish [40]. Thus, the ingestion propensity of
180‐
visual predators is significantly affected by the color of microplastics.In addition to its
181‐
impact on the ingestion preferences, the color of microplastics was also studied as an
182‐
intuitive indicator reflecting the potential toxicity of microplastics. The enrichment of
183‐
PAH in microplastics composed of polyethylene and polypropylene showed no
184‐
difference, while a predictable increase in the PAH concentration was observed along
185‐
with the darkening of the color [41]. Moreover, the lighter colored microplastics are
186‐
prone to having lower molecular weight PAH, and darker microplastics contain higher
187‐
weight PAH [41]. This difference in adsorption capacity due to color also revealed
188‐
that the black microplastics tended to adsorb more chemicals, such as PCBs and PAHs,
189‐
than the white ones [42]. As a result, the organisms would have the additional stress of
190‐
enriched contaminants throughout the circulatory system, tissues and organs due to
191‐
ingestion along with the microplastics. One possible reason for these color-related
192‐
results could be that different pigments are beneficial to the adsorption capacity of
193‐
microplastics [43]. Additionally, the color could reflect the relative age and degree of
194‐
weathering of the microplastic. The affinity between the microplastic surfaces and
195‐
contaminants is affected, and the loss of the pollutants on the surface of the
196‐
microplastic during weathering results in a low degree of adsorption. The direct
197‐
relationship between color and pollutant enrichment is a very new finding in
198‐
toxicological research. The underlying mechanisms from the aspects of the chemical
199‐
composition and how the microplastics with different colors behaved in the aquatic
7‐ ‐
200‐
environment should be studied. Moreover, considering the ingestion preference of the
201‐
organisms and the predictable variation of the contaminant enrichment, monitoring of
202‐
the microplastic color spectrum could be beneficial to the preliminary assessment of
203‐
microplastic toxicity for organisms with different feeding preferences.
204‐
Density
205‐
Density influences the distribution and destination of microplastics by affecting
206‐
the trajectory, sinking velocity and spatial distribution of microplastics, which further
207‐
affects the microplastic distribution in the different biota and habitats. For instance,
208‐
the spread of low-density plastics over the surface water impedes the photosynthesis
209‐
of the algae and the respiration of the zooplankton [44], high-density microplastics
210‐
have been consistently detected in the digestive tracts of the benthic invertebrates [45,
211‐
46], and the microplastics that sink to the sediments on the seafloor endanger the deep
212‐
ocean biota [47].
213‐
Moreover, the low-density microplastics ingested by copepods from the surface
214‐
water are excreted in a mixture with the feces after digestion. The density change
215‐
alters the sinking velocity of the copepod-egested fecal pellets, which are important
216‐
food sources for fish, polychaetes, crustaceans and copepods. Consequently, the food
217‐
distribution for marine organisms may be impacted, and the bioavailability of
218‐
microplastics is aggravated during feeding [48]. Furthermore, contaminants such as
219‐
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [49], polychlorinated biphenyls [50], and
220‐
phenanthrene [51] tend to have higher diffusion coefficients in low-density
221‐
microplastics than in high-density microplastics, which directly affects microplastic
222‐
toxicity. Therefore, the density of microplastics in further toxicological studies should
223‐
be considered to be a property with the potential for 1) altering the exposure pathway
224‐
of the contaminants along with the microplastics, 2) inducing combined toxicity
225‐
effects with other pollutants, and 3) causing ecological turbulence by disturbing the
226‐
distribution of food in the aquatic environment.
227‐
Shape The shape of microplastics is a critical morphological feature that has been
228‐
8‐ ‐
229‐
generally divided into regular and irregular shapes considering the initial shape and
230‐
the aging and weathering conditions. More specifically, microplastics can also be
231‐
classified as spheres, fibers, fragments, pellets, films, and flakes [52]. The shape alters
232‐
the hydrodynamic characteristics of microplastics, which relates to a series of
233‐
biological and toxicological effects by disturbing the distribution and bioavailability.
234‐
Unlike density, shape affects the dynamics of microplastics indirectly. The settling
235‐
velocity of microplastics in aquatic environments varies due to their varying shapes
236‐
[53]. Plastic fibers and thin films show higher buoyancy and lower settling velocity
237‐
than spherical plastic particles even if the debris have the same density and volume
238‐
[54, 55]. Based on simplified physical models and geometrical considerations, the
239‐
transport times of polystyrene microplastics in the aquatic environment follow the
240‐
order of foamed polystyrene
241‐
Since the predation processes of most aquatic organism are also dynamic, the changes
242‐
in the microplastic settling and eventual fates due to different morphological shapes
243‐
indirectly affect the opportunities for ingestion and the bioavailability.
244‐
After ingestion, the shape of the microplastics also affects the egestion and
245‐
residence time within the body. For example, D. magna rapidly ingests both regularly
246‐
and irregularly shaped polyethylene microplastic particles, but the gut clearance and
247‐
apparent gut residence times of the irregular microplastic particles were longer than
248‐
those for the irregularly shaped microplastic particles and were even accompanied by
249‐
more pronounced acute inhibitory effects [57]. The microplastic fibers ingested by the
250‐
amphipod Hyalella azteca required longer clearance times than the spheres, and
251‐
higher toxicities were found for the microplastic fibers, which were attributed to
252‐
longer residence times because of the shape [58]. Discharged plastic debris with the
253‐
same composition behaves differently in the aquatic environment, and the threats
254‐
caused by irregularly shaped microplastics tend to be higher due to the difficulty of
255‐
egestion and clearance for organisms compared to the regular spherical particles.
256‐
2.3. Chemical properties
257‐
The chemical nature of microplastics is determined by the plastic composition and
9‐ ‐
258‐
synthesis methods and is expressed as various chemical characteristics, such as
259‐
different functional groups, surface polarities, stabilities, and crystallinities, which
260‐
enable the identification of the microplastics with the potential to leach additives from
261‐
particles or to accumulate environmental pollutants on the surface. Unlike the
262‐
physical properties that directly affecting ingestion or egestion or cause physical
263‐
injury to organisms, the chemical properties of microplastics are related to their
264‐
persistence affinity for chemicals. The patterns of enrichment with contaminants and
265‐
the release of additives change with the prevalence of microplastics; thus, the changes
266‐
in the behavior of the microplastics are discussed from the aspect of the chemical
267‐
properties.
268‐
Functional groups & affinities with pollutants
269‐
The functional groups and polarities of microplastics contribute the most to the
270‐
accumulation of contaminants from the ambient environment (Fig. 2.). The partition
271‐
coefficient Kd of perfluorooctanesulfonamide (FOSA) with different microplastics
272‐
follows
273‐
(Kd(PVC)=115.7 L/kg)>polystyrene (Kd(PS)=84.9 L/kg). The highest Kd for the nonpolar
274‐
PE has been attributed to the strong hydrophobic affinity between the microplastic
275‐
and the symmetric nonionic FOSA. The benzene rings on PS cause steric hindrance of
276‐
the bond rotation and decrease the free volume between the chains, leading to the low
277‐
sorption levels [59]. The adsorption of the antibiotics sulfadiazine (SDZ), amoxicillin
278‐
(AMX), tetracycline (TC), ciprofloxacin (CIP) and trimethoprim (TMP) on the 5
279‐
types of microplastic polyethylene (PE), polystyrene (PS), polypropylene (PP),
280‐
polyamide (PA), and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) depends on the hydrogen bonding,
281‐
hydrophobic interaction, van der Waals forces and electrostatic interactions, and the
282‐
highest adsorption capacity of PA with antibiotics is attributed to the strong
283‐
H-bonding with the amide groups [60]. The adsorption behavior of polyethylene (PE),
284‐
polystyrene (PS) and polystyrene carboxylate (PS-COOH) with 18 perfluoroalkyl
285‐
substances (PFASs) follows the order PS>PS-COOH>PE, and the influence of the
286‐
hydrophobic interaction between PFASs with microplastics has been shown to
the order of
polyethylene (Kd(PE)=298.3
10‐ ‐
L/kg)>polyvinyl
chloride
287‐
increase the toxicity of hydrophobic contaminants to organisms and aquatic
288‐
ecosystem [61]. In addition to pollutant accumulation, the functional groups on
289‐
microplastics may also directly interfere with microplastic toxicity. For instance, no
290‐
significant difference between the adsorption of Ni on PS and PS-COOH was found,
291‐
yet the toxicity of Ni mixed with PS-COOH was higher than that with PS. The
292‐
detailed mechanism for this phenomenon remains unclear; nevertheless, the combined
293‐
effect suggests that the toxicity of pollutants varies with the different functional
294‐
groups of microplastics [62].
295‐
Crystallinity
296‐
In aquatic environments, the crystallinity of an adsorbent may affect the separation of
297‐
the HOC (hydrophobic organic contaminants) from carbohydrates and other
298‐
semicrystalline (biological) polymers [63]. Organic adsorbents in the environment are
299‐
composed of organic polymers that contain both crystalline and amorphous phases.
300‐
The crystalline areas are categorized by molecules or molecular segments that are
301‐
usually arranged in lattices. In contrast, the amorphous regions have randomly
302‐
arranged molecules, thus showing a loose and flexible structure that is more similar to
303‐
that of a liquid. The adsorption of HOC usually occurs on the amorphous areas due to
304‐
its internal structure, which is characterized as glassy or rubbery. The adsorbent could
305‐
be considered a mixture of glass and rubber polymers. Organic pollutants tend to have
306‐
higher affinities for rubber plastics than for glass plastics [64-66]. The polymer
307‐
portion of the glass phase has higher adhesion and more concentrated force, while the
308‐
polymer segment of the rubber phase shows greater fluidity and flexibility and can be
309‐
thought of as a dynamic viscous liquid. Because of their rigidity, glass polymers have
310‐
a long life and closed internal nanoholes, which can act as adsorption sites for organic
311‐
contaminants in water. The characterization of crystallinity could facilitate further
312‐
assessments of the affinity between microplastics and environmental pollutants.
313‐
Stability
314‐
The additives used during plastic synthesis, such as monomers, oligomers, pigments,
315‐
reinforcements, and plasticizers, usually present high toxicity to organisms. The
11‐ ‐
316‐
weathering alters the properties of microplastics and accelerates the release of some
317‐
superfluous compounds from the microplastics [67], threatening the ecological health
318‐
of aquatic ecosystems. Significant enrichment of hexabromocyclododecanes
319‐
(HBCDDs) has been found in marine sediments and mussels, and the subsequent
320‐
research to identify the source confirmed that HBCDDs were leached from expanded
321‐
polystyrene (EPS), which is a widely used material in aquaculture farming. In
322‐
addition, the acute toxicity of leachates from different plastics varies differently after
323‐
irradiation and weathering. To test the toxicity caused by the low stability, twenty-one
324‐
types of plastic debris were irradiated with artificial sunlight; 38% of these
325‐
microplastics had leachates that resulted in acute toxicity to the marine harpacticoid
326‐
copepod Nitocra spinipes [68]. Both the plastic-derived chemicals bisphenol A (BPA)
327‐
and di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) have been reported to cause 1.2- to 50-fold
328‐
reductions in biomass and to perturb the photosystem and photosynthetic activity of
329‐
the marine toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium pacificum [69]. Exposure experiments
330‐
with microplastics made from polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and its associated
331‐
plasticizer
332‐
Parvocalanus crassirostris showed that the nauplii were severely impacted even at
333‐
low chemical concentrations, presenting a 48 h LC50 value of 1.04 ng/L. DEHP did
334‐
not show a significant impact on the adult copepods. However, the egg production of
335‐
the copepods was reduced under the sublethal concentration of DEHP or the
336‐
microplastic [70]. This induction of a heritable reproductive disorder by the
337‐
microplastic and its plasticizer poses a potential threat to subsequent generations of
338‐
copepods and even the organisms at higher trophic levels. In addition, not only the
339‐
organic additives but also the release of the total organic carbon, Cl, Ca, Cu, and Zn
340‐
from the aged microplastics were significantly increased due to photooxidation in the
341‐
aquatic environment. New adsorption bands of -C
342‐
during the aging process, which emphasizes the importance of analyzing the stability
343‐
of microplastics during toxicity tracking research and risk assessments [71].
344‐
Surface charge
Di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate
(DEHP)
12‐ ‐
with
the
calanoid
copepod
O -C—O and -OH were formed
345‐
The surface charge of microplastic has rarely been discussed in comparison with
346‐
the functional groups and the polarity; however, the contribution to microplastic
347‐
toxicity is nonnegligible. The embryotoxicity test of PS-COOH and PS-NH2 for
348‐
embryos of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus suggested that the status of the
349‐
charges (i.e., +/-) caused various dispersion patterns of the microplastics inside the
350‐
bodies of the studied organisms, and only PS-NH2 disrupted the cell membrane and
351‐
caused oxidative stress, which eventually induced cell death by apoptosis in the sea
352‐
urchin embryos [72]. The opposite surface charges of microplastics and natural
353‐
organic matter compounds and minerals also facilitate their interactions in aquatic
354‐
environments. The nanoscale materials in natural media are generally charged, and the
355‐
heteroaggregation with microplastics due to opposite surface charges further
356‐
influences the uptake rate by biota and the biodistribution of this nutrient matter,
357‐
disrupting the essential physiological functions linked to the feeding and growth of
358‐
organisms [73, 74]. Both the neutral and positively charged microplastics increased
359‐
TiO2 NP toxicity for the marine algae Chlorella sp., and the oxidative stress followed
360‐
the trend TiO2 NPs+ Plain PS/NH2-PS > TiO2 NPs+ COOH-PS [75].
361‐
3. Spatiotemporal dynamics (distribution) affect microplastic ingestion by
362‐
organisms
363‐
While the pressure of microplastics on aquatic ecosystems is increasingly
364‐
recognized, the understanding of the spatiotemporal dynamics of microplastics
365‐
remains limited. The spatial dynamics reflect the distribution and pollution conditions
366‐
of microplastics, and the temporal dynamics provide information on the fluctuations
367‐
of microplastic contamination over time. The lack of comprehensive consideration of
368‐
the distribution dynamics may lead to biases in contamination monitoring and risk
369‐
assessments. Therefore, the features of the spatiotemporal distribution provide a better
370‐
understanding of the occurrence of microplastics within aquatic ecosystems as well as
371‐
the dynamic toxicity patterns.
372‐
3.1 Spatial distribution The microplastics in aquatic environments travel around the globe, driven by the
373‐
13‐ ‐
374‐
orientation of the coastline and the local wind and wave conditions [17, 76]. An
375‐
annual microplastic survey of three exposed beaches on the Canary Islands proved the
376‐
migration of portable microplastic debris of nonlocal origin from the North Atlantic
377‐
Ocean, driven by the southward-flowing Canary Current [77]. The lateral
378‐
geographical distribution of microplastics in the global ocean far from the polar
379‐
region was reviewed, and the modeling approaches for predicting the fate and
380‐
prevalence of microplastics were summarized [78, 79]. Therefore, in this study, the
381‐
vertical spatial distribution of microplastics in aquatic environments and the
382‐
ecological impact were discussed further.
383‐
According to the distance travelled by sunlight, the ocean is vertically divided
384‐
into the euphotic zone (0~200 m), disphotic zone (200~1000 m), and aphotic zone
385‐
(upon 1000 m) [80]. The phytoplankton, zooplankton, forage fish and predator fish
386‐
are the most affected by the widespread light-weight microplastic in the euphotic zone
387‐
and have been most frequently reported in recent decades. Moreover, the
388‐
accumulation of microplastic particles also occurs within the sea surface microlayer,
389‐
which is the naturally reactive boundary layer between the water and atmosphere [44].
390‐
The accumulated microplastics within the microlayer affect the photochemical
391‐
reactions by interfering with the sunlight irradiation in this region. As a result, the
392‐
photosynthesis, respiration and physiological activities of the plankton are further
393‐
impacted. With the presence of microplastics, the growth of the algae Skeletonema
394‐
costatum has been shown to be inhibited [81], and the roots of a floating plant, the
395‐
duckweed Lemna minor, were mechanically blocked [82]. In addition, the potential
396‐
risk of microplastics acting as a substrate for reactions between complex compounds,
397‐
such as inorganic components, dissolved organic matter, or contaminants enriched in
398‐
the surface microlayer, is another severe issue that may trigger diverse photochemical
399‐
reactions within the euphotic zone.
400‐
The prevalence of microplastics below the euphotic zone mainly depends on the
401‐
diel vertical migration (DVM) of the active mesopelagic fishes that transfer
402‐
microplastics from the sea surface to the disphotic zone and the aphotic zone. The
14‐ ‐
403‐
mesopelagic fishes show a high ingestion rate for microplastics regardless of the
404‐
species, location, or migration behavior, and the movement of mesopelagic fish from
405‐
the euphotic zone to the deep sea mediates the transfer of microplastics to unexposed
406‐
species and regions of the ocean [83, 84]. This phenomenon was further confirmed by
407‐
in situ feeding experiments with the large larvaceans Bathochordaeus, which
408‐
indicated that the microplastics from the sea surface could be delivered to the seafloor
409‐
via biological interference [85]. The ecological consequences are still poorly
410‐
understood, but the unpredictable movement of the mesopelagic fish has facilitated
411‐
the abundant occurrence of microplastics throughout a wide area of the oceans, and
412‐
the further impact on the aquatic ecosystem remains unknown. For the aphotic zone of
413‐
the ocean, microplastics are found ubiquitously on the seafloors of the Southern
414‐
Ocean, North Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Guinea, and the Mediterranean Sea [86]. The
415‐
microplastics were moved through the ocean and sunk into the deep sediment,
416‐
invading one of the most pristine and vulnerable areas of the marine environment. The
417‐
ingestion of microplastics by lysianassoid amphipods at the deepest location of all the
418‐
Earth’s oceans was detected [87]. The occurrence at the seafloor suggests a long-term
419‐
exposure of benthic ecosystems to microplastics [88].
420‐
3.2 Temporal dynamics
421‐
Seasonal climate change influences the temporal variation in disturbance from
422‐
microplastics. The significant differences in the microplastic amounts sampled from
423‐
Lambra (La Graciosa Island) and Famara (Lanzarote Island) presented seasonal
424‐
occurrence patterns of microplastics in aquatic environments, which is attributed to
425‐
the local-scale wind and the seasonal wave condition variation [77]. In the Pearl River
426‐
in China, the density of plastic debris in the rainy season was reported to be
427‐
significantly higher than that in the dry season because of the larger amount of river
428‐
discharge [89]. The weak management of plastic pollution in inland environments
429‐
allows flooding in urban areas to flush the discharged plastic debris into the ocean. A
430‐
comparison of the microplastic occurrence from December 2016 to January 2017 in
431‐
Mersin Bay suggested that the seasonally heavy rains and floods increased the
15‐ ‐
432‐
microplastic abundance in the aquatic environment over time; after being flushed by
433‐
the floods, the average microplastic size decreased from 2.37 mm (preflood period) to
434‐
1.13 mm (postflood period) [90]. As a consequence of this seasonal occurrence
435‐
pattern, the seasonality of organism assemblages could be threatened by changes in
436‐
the microplastic bioavailability over time.
437‐
The distribution of microplastics, zooplankton and the fish larvae in the
438‐
mangrove creeks of the Goiana Estuary, Brazil, changes with the lunar cycle due to
439‐
the different tidal current regimes. The higher abundance of microplastic threads was
440‐
revealed, while there were fewer zooplankton available in the creeks [91]. Such
441‐
dynamic variation in both the aquatic species and the microplastic occurrence leads to
442‐
seasonal differences and diverse threats to different species. For example, more
443‐
microplastics were detected during summer than spring in the digestive tracts of two
444‐
economically and ecologically crucial planktivorous forage fish, the Atlantic herring
445‐
(Clupea harengus) and the European sprat (Sprattus sprattus), in the Baltic Sea. The
446‐
variation in uptake was mainly due to the seasonal difference in feeding activity,
447‐
which reflected the variation in the vulnerability of the organisms at different
448‐
developmental stages [92]. It is also interesting that zooplanktivores were likely to
449‐
feed on more microplastics than natural prey before the rainy season. Before the rainy
450‐
season, the meroplankton in the macrobenthos could be confused with paint particles,
451‐
whereas styrofoam could be mistaken for immature copepods by predators [93]. The
452‐
possible explanation for this phenomenon could be the lower microplastics abundance
453‐
after the rainy season or the behavioral plasticity for the nonspecific food selection
454‐
ability of the predator.
455‐
The interference of the temporal dynamic of the microplastics tends to be
456‐
complicated and versatile, and the physicochemical parameters and nutritional quality
457‐
of the habitat directly influence the living conditions of the organisms [94]. A better
458‐
understanding of seasonal fluctuations and the subsequent influence induced by the
459‐
microplastics comes from the accuracy and importance of the research. To achieve a
460‐
comprehensive understanding of the ecological disturbance caused by microplastics,
16‐ ‐
461‐
both the spatial and temporal dynamic patterns of microplastics should be considered
462‐
in relation to the seasonal activity of organisms during pollution monitoring,
463‐
toxicological tests, and the subsequent analysis of the instability of ecological health.
464‐
4. How do organisms respond to the microplastic toxicity?
465‐
Many studies have investigated the microplastic-induced adverse effects on
466‐
organisms, which range from disruption of physiological functions to lethal effects.
467‐
Based on the fate of microplastics after ingestion, microplastic toxicity could be
468‐
classified as follows: 1) accumulation within the digestive tract, causing physical damage such as
469‐ 470‐
clogging and injury;
471‐
2) discharge as pseudofeces, which disturbs the energy flow of organisms;
472‐
3) translocation within the body, which exposes the internal tissues and organs to
473‐
microplastics.
474‐
The overall generalization of the microplastic-caused adverse effects on organisms
475‐
was summarized to establish a sound research framework for future microplastic
476‐
toxicological studies and to assess the potential ecological disturbances on a large
477‐
scale.
478‐
4.1 Physical damage
479‐
Physical damage is the most apparent effect from the ingestion of microplastics
480‐
by organisms. The most common damage includes intestinal blockage, cracking of
481‐
villi and splitting of enterocytes [38]. Furthermore, tissue alteration also occurs even
482‐
after the ephemeral occurrence and accumulation. Structural changes in the gills and
483‐
digestive glands, as well as necrosis in other tissues, such as the mantle have been
484‐
observed in mussels after microplastic ingestion [95, 96]. The more detailed and
485‐
specific physical impacts of microplastics were reviewed by Wright et al. [20]. In this
486‐
review, the subtle yet more profound interference with energy storage, metabolism,
487‐
physiological behavior and survival of organisms is further addressed below.
488‐
4.2 Energy budget disturbance Organisms generate false satiation after the ingestion of microplastics, which
489‐
17‐ ‐
490‐
consequently disrupts their regular nutrition and energy intake and leads to abnormal
491‐
physiological responses. Studies of the disturbance of the energy budget caused by
492‐
microplastics have been conducted by monitoring the influence on the ingestion,
493‐
respiration, growth and excretion of the organisms. The filtering activity of the blue
494‐
mussel (Mytilus edulis) was reduced after the ingestion of 100 nm polystyrene
495‐
microplastics, and the feeding activity was further affected [97]. The weight of the
496‐
polychaete worm Arenicola marina was changed by suppressed feeding activity due
497‐
to microplastics, which reflected an up to 50% depletion of the energy reserves [24].
498‐
The ingestion of foods containing microfibers (0.3-1 wt%) by the crab Carcinus
499‐
maenas also reduced the food consumption from 0.33 to 0.03 g/d, and the energy
500‐
available for growth for the crab decreased from 0.59 to -0.31 kJ crab/d [98]. The
501‐
disturbance of the energy budgets of the organisms was always accompanied by the
502‐
production of pseudofeces, and the growth and performance were obstructed as a
503‐
consequence of the reduction in energy intake and depletion of energy reserve
504‐
depletion.
505‐
According to the Wilby 1988 scoring system, the morphology of Hydra attenuate
506‐
also changed significantly after the ingestion of microplastics [99]. The body length of
507‐
Caenorhabditis elegans was significantly reduced after 2 days of microplastic
508‐
exposure due to the decreased energy assimilation [38]. The development of
509‐
Paracentrotus lividus plutei with different body lengths and arm lengths indicated the
510‐
interference of microplastics during postembryonic development; in Ciona robusta,
511‐
metamorphosis was inhibited at an early life stage [100].
512‐
Different species can only function well in an ecosystem when the individual
513‐
organisms maintain healthy physiological states. The ingested and accumulated
514‐
microplastics are transferred to higher trophic levels, and such energy deficiency in
515‐
individual organisms impedes the energy uptake, development and population of the
516‐
species and subsequently disturbs the energy flow through the entire food web [101].
517‐
4.3 Translocation within the body of an organism After ingestion, subsequent microplastic trafficking was observed in different
518‐
18‐ ‐
519‐
organs of organisms, which was followed by gradual yet incomplete renal clearance
520‐
(Fig. 3.). Cytotoxicity research on different nanoparticles suggests that the nature of
521‐
endocytosis and particle-cell interactions provides particles with a pathway to expose
522‐
tissue and organs [102, 103]. After crossing biological barriers (such as cell
523‐
membranes), the microplastics translocated from the digestive system through both
524‐
active and passive physical penetration have a considerable impact on biological
525‐
processes, even causing long-lasting and irreversible damage to organisms [104-107].
526‐
Although the crucial factors for the penetration capability of microplastics remain
527‐
poorly understood, the translocation of microplastics within the body has been shown
528‐
to induce complicated sublethal responses to organisms (Table 1).
529‐
4.4 Metabolism and sublethal responses
530‐
The internal exposure of the circulatory system, tissue and organs to
531‐
microplastics results in metabolic disorders and sublethal responses in organisms,
532‐
which is reflected in endocrine disorders, oxidative stress, immune responses, and
533‐
altered gene expression [108]. The metabolism and growth of an organism are
534‐
simultaneously critically affected by microplastic ingestion. The polystyrene
535‐
microplastics in the guts of the adult zebrafish increased the volume of mucus and
536‐
triggered inflammation after ingestion. The high-throughput sequencing of the 16S
537‐
rRNA gene V3-V4 region and the operational taxonomic unit analysis revealed an
538‐
in-depth response at the phylum and genus levels, suggesting that the microplastic
539‐
exposure within the gut changed the richness and diversity of the microbiota,
540‐
eventually leading to a microbial imbalance [109]. The oxygen consumption of the
541‐
shore crab Carcinus maenas showed a dosage effect from microplastic exposure;
542‐
subsequently, a small but significant decrease in the hemolymph sodium ions and an
543‐
increase in the calcium ions were observed [110]. Another example is that the reactive
544‐
oxygen species (ROS) produced during the phagocytosis of the nanoparticles could
545‐
act as an indicator of cytotoxicity[111]. A significant size-dependent increase in the
546‐
ROS levels in the monogonont rotifer Brachionus koreanus were observed from
547‐
microplastic exposure. The activation of antioxidant-related enzymes as defense
19‐ ‐
548‐
mechanisms further proved the oxidative stress induced by the microplastic [37].
549‐
In further reports, the endocrine system function of the Japanese medaka Oryzias
550‐
latipes was disturbed under microplastic exposure at environmentally relevant
551‐
concentrations, and gene expression was observed to be altered after chronic
552‐
two-month dietary exposure. It is quite relevant that the dosage severely influences
553‐
and regulates choriogenin (Chg H) gene expression in males as well as vitellogenin
554‐
(Vtg I), choriogenin (Chg H) and estrogen receptor (ERα) gene expression in females.
555‐
The histological observation also shows the abnormal proliferation of germ cells in
556‐
one male fish [112].
557‐
Moreover, a transcriptome analysis showed that the microplastic particles were
558‐
integrated into the immunological recognition process of the zebrafish larvae and that
559‐
the nuclear receptors in the lipid metabolism and toxicity pathway were enriched, and
560‐
the colocalization of neutrophils and macrophages was found around the PS particles
561‐
[22]. In another report, a significant neurotoxic effect and oxidative stress was
562‐
observed in the Amphibalanus amphitrite barnacle and Artemia franciscana brine
563‐
shrimp triggered by microplastic accumulation. The low enzymatic activity from the
564‐
damage and the presence of the defense biomarkers cholinesterase (indicative of
565‐
neurotoxicity) and catalase (indicative of oxidative stress) suggested that the
566‐
microplastics disturbed the detoxification of hydrogen peroxide in the organisms [21].
567‐
Underlying the phenomenal inhibitory effect of microplastics on the body length,
568‐
reproduction and survival rates of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the increased
569‐
expression of the glutathione S-transferase 4 enzyme in the intestine suggests that
570‐
intestinal damage and oxidative stress may be the major mechanisms for the toxic
571‐
effects of microplastics [38, 113].
572‐
4.5 The impact on behavioral pattern, fecundity, and survival
573‐
The disruption of behavioral patterns, fecundity and survival are regarded as the
574‐
ultimate toxicological responses of organisms under stress from anthropogenic
575‐
alterations to the environment [114]. The chronic exposure of Ceriodaphnia dubia to
576‐
microplastic fibers had a dose-dependent effect on energy loss and physical damage,
20‐ ‐
577‐
leading to reduced growth and reproduction [115]. In a similar investigation of the
578‐
toxicity and impacts of microplastic, it was observed that the mortality of the Asian
579‐
green mussel Perna viridis was increased due to energy reserve depletion, which
580‐
affected the essential life functions [116].
581‐
Moreover, the abnormal behaviors reflect the distempered physiological functions
582‐
of the organisms, which impact individual development and life survival under harsh
583‐
environmental conditions. The jump height of the beachhopper Platorchestia smithi
584‐
was reduced after ingesting microplastic particles [117]. The swimming activity of
585‐
marine crustaceans was altered under microplastic exposure, and the swimming
586‐
speeds of Amphibalanus amphitrite and Artemia franciscana were inhibited
587‐
significantly due to the mechanical disturbance caused by microplastic agglomeration
588‐
[21]. Similarly abnormal swimming activity was also observed; the water flea C.
589‐
dubia becomes entangled in microplastic clusters, which results in an inability to
590‐
swim [115]. The changes to physiological activity could further interfere with their
591‐
feeding activity and ability to avoid predators.
592‐
Notably, the changes to the behavioral patterns also reflect the subhealthy status,
593‐
potential fecundity interference and the increased mortality of organisms, which
594‐
warns of subsequent ecological effects from the superficial phenomenon. For instance,
595‐
further investigation of the reduction in the jump height of the beachhopper
596‐
Platorchestia smithi revealed that the beachhoppers also suffered from microplastic
597‐
translocation from the gut to the gills. The survival rate was reduced simultaneously
598‐
with the behavioral alternation. Thus, the abnormal behavioral patterns of species
599‐
could act as an indicator of the microplastic burden on the vital activities of organisms
600‐
[117].
601‐
4.6 Combined effects of the inorganic and organic pollutants
602‐
Beyond the direct toxicity caused by microplastics that was discussed above, the
603‐
combined effects of the microplastics and environmental contaminants cause
604‐
worsened contamination. The enduring plastic debris drifting in the aquatic
605‐
environment acts as a reservoir or vector, accumulating widespread trace pollutants,
21‐ ‐
606‐
leading to long-distance transport and high bioavailability of hydrophobic and toxic
607‐
contaminants for organisms. The desorption of chemicals under the conditions in the
608‐
gut is reported to be 30 times higher than that in seawater [118], and the toxicity of
609‐
both the microplastic and environmental pollutants tends to be more detrimental due
610‐
to the combined effects (Table 2). Considering the potential for bioaccumulation and
611‐
biomagnification within aquatic ecosystems, the combined toxicity effects of
612‐
microplastics with different contaminants have been widely studied in recent decades.
613‐
5. What ecological consequence will be triggered by the disturbances from
614‐
microplastics? How is the ubiquity of microplastics related to the function of aquatic ecosystems?
615‐ 616‐
To maintain an intact aquatic environment, different environmental elements and all
617‐
species provide valuable ecological services for the ecosystem. However, by altering
618‐
natural habitats; disturbing the bacterial community; disrupting the development of
619‐
species, populations and communities development; and indiscriminately interfering
620‐
with the indispensable ecological functions of the ecosystem, widespread
621‐
microplastics jeopardize basically every process in an ecosystem. These disturbances
622‐
are known to threaten ecosystem stability, but forecasting the direct outcomes from
623‐
scattered evidence is not yet possible. For an improved understanding of the linkage
624‐
between environmental perturbations and the prevalence of microplastics, identifying
625‐
the distress signals that foretell major disruptions to ecology may one day predict, or
626‐
perhaps even prevent, the potential destabilization of ecosystems.
627‐
5.1 Ecosystem productivity disturbance
628‐
The prosperity of aquatic ecosystems is supported by steady ecosystem
629‐
productivity, and primary production plays a fundamental role in structuring aquatic
630‐
food webs. However, the ubiquity of microplastics as a human-driven environmental
631‐
change may lead to losses in ecosystem productivity by obstructing nutrient
632‐
production and cycling within ecosystems. By using salps as model organisms under
633‐
environmentally relevant concentrations, microplastics were detected in the fecal
634‐
pellets. Under potential future scenarios, up to 46% of fecal pellets are predicted to
22‐ ‐
635‐
contain microplastics, which would lower the efficiency of biological pumps in
636‐
driving sequestration of the anthropogenic carbon in the ocean [119]. Moreover, the
637‐
interactions between the microalgae Skeletonema costatum and microplastics, such as
638‐
adsorption and aggregation, reduce the algal chlorophyll content, resulting in low
639‐
photosynthetic efficiency. The growth of algae has been shown to be inhibited, and
640‐
subsequently, the biomass of this marine primary producer was reduced [81].
641‐
Heteroaggregation was shown to trigger the overexpression of the sugar biosynthesis
642‐
pathways in microalgae [120]. Microplastics have also been widely reported to cause
643‐
the physiological activities of moving and burrowing to be defective in the lugworm
644‐
Arenicola marina, which plays an essential role in oxygenating sediments and
645‐
controlling ecosystem services [121]. Furthermore, the energy assimilation of the
646‐
lugworm was compromised due to the suppressed feeding activity, and the faunal
647‐
diversity of the sediment habitats could be vulnerable. As the prey species for fish and
648‐
wading birds, the function of secondary producers may also be damaged during
649‐
ecosystem nutrient cycling [24]. As an emerging topic, the long-term or ecological
650‐
results have not yet been found, but such driving forces for the disturbance of
651‐
ecosystem productivity could result in alterations in biodiversity via defective
652‐
development of species, populations and communities.
653‐
5.2 Defective development of species, populations and communities
654‐
The detrimental impacts of microplastics on the growth and performance of
655‐
individual organisms threatens the development of the species and trophic-level
656‐
energy transfer, leading to nonfunctioning communities (Fig. 4.). The reduction in
657‐
biodiversity triggered by microplastics could also lead to defective community
658‐
development. The existence of microplastics at the nesting grounds in the northern
659‐
Gulf of Mexico altered the habitats of marine turtles (including the temperature and
660‐
permeability of the sediment), which negatively affected the incubation of this
661‐
endangered species [122]. Biodiversity contributes to the ecological flexibility of
662‐
ecosystems, and the interference in the lives and reproduction of endangered species
663‐
threatens their survival; further loss of biodiversity could disturb the normal
23‐ ‐
664‐
functioning of ecosystems [123]. Moreover, a negative impact on individual organisms or single species may be
665‐ 666‐
accumulated
and
magnified
an
disrupt
community
development.
Labeled
667‐
microplastics ingested by zooplankton were subsequently found in a mysid intestine,
668‐
which showed the transfer of microplastics from one trophic level (mesozooplankton)
669‐
to a higher level (macrozooplankton) [11]. Mytilus edulis mussels were exposed to
670‐
microplastics and experienced bioaccumulation and biomagnification; the mussels
671‐
were then fed to Carcinus maenas crabs, which also displayed bioaccumulation and
672‐
biomagnification [124]. Such trophic transfer could disturb the flow of energy in the
673‐
food web and the ecosystem. In addition, even without direct impacts on one specific
674‐
species, microplastics may still be detrimental for interspecies interactions (e.g.,
675‐
mutualistic relationship), which could cause a series of cascading effects in aquatic
676‐
ecosystems. For example, the damage to European flat oysters Ostrea edulis was
677‐
limited; the associated benthic accumulation structures, however, were altered by
678‐
microplastic exposure, and the species abundance and the total number of organisms
679‐
were decreased by ~1.2 and 1.5 times, respectively [125].
680‐
5.3 Microcosm interference
681‐
Microorganisms, which constitute more than 90% of the living biomass in the
682‐
ocean, dominate the abundance, diversity and metabolic activity in marine ecosystems.
683‐
Because microorganisms decompose marine organic matter, the variation in microbial
684‐
biomass and assemblages could change the carbon flux patterns and the
685‐
carbon-nitrogen cycle and modify the ecosystem function [126, 127]. Compared to
686‐
autochthonous substrates, the longer half-lives and hydrophobic surfaces of
687‐
microplastics promote strong affinities with microorganisms, which facilitates
688‐
microbial interaction, colonization and biofilm formation. After bacterial colonization
689‐
of this enduring habitat, plastisphere-specific bacterial assemblages with distinct
690‐
taxonomic compositions from the ambient environment develop rapidly [128, 129].
691‐
The colonization on microplastics alters the ecological function and the functioning of
692‐
microbial communities [130]. In a simulation of the elevated levels of nutrients and
24‐ ‐
693‐
the persistence of substrates, the functional diversity and biomass of the
694‐
microorganisms were affected due to changes in the heterotrophic activities on the
695‐
microplastics, which has potential impacts on global bacteria-driven ecosystem
696‐
processes such as C and N cycling [131]. Moreover, the transfer frequency of
697‐
plasmids carrying antibiotic resistance genes was found to be higher in the
698‐
microplastic-associated bacteria compared to the free-living bacteria, leading to
699‐
microcosm interference via evolutionary changes at the species and population levels
700‐
[132].
701‐
Another issue with the interference of microplastics with microcosms is that some
702‐
plastisphere members may be adaptable pathogens. The Arenicola atlantica gut
703‐
pathogens were detected on microplastics after the excretion; the ingestion of
704‐
microplastics by organisms is inevitable, and the bacterial assemblages would be
705‐
changed after passing through the digestive tract [133]. The occurrence of the human
706‐
pathogens Vibrio spp. on marine microplastics suggests that microplastics act as
707‐
vehicles for multitrophic level transfer of pathogenic microorganisms [134].
708‐
Aeromonas salmonicaida, one of the most harmful invasive bacteria responsible for
709‐
infections in the fish, was recently found on microplastics. The presence of A.
710‐
salmonicaida has rarely been recorded in the sea, but with the microplastics serving as
711‐
vectors, such pathogens may travel long distances and spread diseases on a global
712‐
scale [135].
713‐
5.4 Vulnerable specific aquatic ecosystem
714‐
The prevalence of microplastics in ecosystems with unique geographical
715‐
characteristics as well as indispensable functions (e.g., wetlands, estuaries, mangroves,
716‐
and deep ocean seafloor ecosystems) presents a higher risk of deteriorating the
717‐
vulnerable aquatic environments. Therefore, the microplastic disturbances in highly
718‐
sensitive ecosystems should be highlighted.
719‐
The intertidal zone, which connects terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, is exposed
720‐
to a high risk of influence from microplastics due to its proximity to plastic debris
721‐
sources. Microplastic fibers were detected in the intertidal ecosystem of one exposed
25‐ ‐
722‐
beach and two protected beaches along the eastern shore of Nova Scotia [136]. The
723‐
highest microplastic concentration occurred at the high tide line on the exposed beach
724‐
because the low-density microplastic debris is more likely to be stranded at the upper
725‐
limits of the wave action in this high-energy environment. For the protected beaches,
726‐
the highest microplastic accumulation occurred in the low tide region due to the
727‐
enhanced deposition by the reduced waves and the altered properties of the
728‐
microplastics due to microbial films. The internal ecosystems were exposed to both
729‐
air and seawater and a high diversity of species were exposed to heightened risk to,
730‐
which may present unexpected impacts on both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems
731‐
[136]. Prior to the transfer of water to the marine ecosystem, estuaries create
732‐
“brackish” waters by mixing the freshwater from river and saltwater from the ocean;
733‐
these areas have also been proven to be hotspots of microplastic contamination [137,
734‐
138]. The widespread microplastics in the estuaries and wetlands of southern Europe
735‐
and western Africa have been detected in sediment samples, macroinvertebrates, and
736‐
shorebird feces, indicating that the microplastics have entered into the food chain and
737‐
show evidence of transferring to the secondary intertidal consumers [139]. Another
738‐
valuable ecosystem located between the land and the ocean is the mangrove forest,
739‐
which transports nutrients from the land to estuaries and supports essential ecological
740‐
functions (e.g., intercepting land-driven nutrients, pollutants, and suspended matter
741‐
from travelling to deeper water; exporting materials for near-shore food webs; and
742‐
buffering against natural hazards) [140][141]. The prevalence of microplastics in this
743‐
ecosystem was identified in seven intertidal mangrove habitats in Singapore (up to
744‐
three times higher than the concentrations reported in the UK) due to the degradation
745‐
of marine plastic debris. The interference of microplastics may hinder mangrove
746‐
ecological system functions and reduce ecosystem services for coastal protection
747‐
[142].
748‐
Moreover, the invasion of microplastics into unknown regions is no longer the
749‐
most astonishing discovery. For instance, the deep sea is considered a major sink for
750‐
the microplastics [143]. Microplastics were first detected in pristine deep ocean
26‐ ‐
751‐
sediments worldwide in the polar front, Porcupine Abyssal Plain, distal lobe of Congo
752‐
Canyon, and Nile deep-sea Fan, indicating the spread of microplastics throughout the
753‐
unknown deep-sea regions [86]. After these findings, widespread microplastics
754‐
(42~6595 microplastic/kg) were detected in Arctic sea sediments at 2340~5570 m
755‐
depths. The accumulation and transport of microplastics may be attributed to sinking
756‐
algal aggregates and thermohaline circulation [81, 144].
757‐
Marine snow is another transport vehicle for microplastics into the abyssal depths
758‐
of the ocean. The sink rate for microplastics was shown to change significantly with
759‐
incorporation into the snow, changing from 818 m/day for the buoyant polymer
760‐
polyethylene to 916 m/day for the denser polyamide fragments, which increased the
761‐
bioavailability to benthic organisms [145]. After identifying microplastics in the deep
762‐
sea (>2200 m) at Rockall Trough, North Atlantic Ocean, the microplastics were
763‐
observed being ingested by benthic macroinvertebrates through various feeding
764‐
modes [146]. A True's beaked whale Mesoplodon mirus stranded on the coast of
765‐
Ireland was analyzed to study the ecology of the deep diving oceanic cetaceans, and
766‐
microplastics were found in the whale’s stomach [147]. As the largest yet least
767‐
studied ecosystem on earth, the ecological function and structure of the vulnerable
768‐
deep sea region may be altered by anthropogenic pressure [148, 149].
769‐
Likewise, for the Arctic aquatic ecosystem, microplastics were detected in
770‐
particularly high concentrations in the sea ice at Fram Strait, the Barents Sea slope,
771‐
and even in the remote Central Arctic [150]. Considering global climate change and
772‐
the yearly sea ice melt of between 1.6×104 km3 and 1.93×104 km3, the potential
773‐
release of microplastics was predicted at a minimum of 7.2×1020 and a maximum of
774‐
8.7×1020 particles/year between 2011 and 2016. The variation in the microplastic
775‐
pattern is prone to occur in areas with strong seasonal sea ice melt or outflow
776‐
gateways.
777‐
6. The contradictory opinions about microplastic toxicity & future research
778‐
perspectives The risk of microplastic toxicity has been the subject of a long-standing debate.
779‐
27‐ ‐
780‐
The main reasons that researchers have doubted the environmental risks of
781‐
microplastics are as follows:
782‐
1) The unrealistically high concentrations used during most experiments;
783‐
2) The incomparable sampling and analytical approaches used;
784‐
3) The failure to provide solid evidence for the toxicity effect and the
785‐
dosage-effect response in different studies.
786‐
For example, Kokalj et al. reported that facial cleanser microplastic particles were
787‐
not severely hazardous to isopods [151]. Hermsen et al. suggest that the toxicity of the
788‐
microplastics presented in the environment might be lower than anticipated due to the
789‐
asymmetrical approach conducted during the study [25]. Limited acute toxicity was
790‐
observed from the ingestion of microplastics by the Antarctic krill Euphausia superba,
791‐
and no mortality or the dose-dependent weight loss was observed; microplastics were
792‐
eliminated by most of the individuals without obvious bioaccumulation [152]. Rehse
793‐
et al. proposed that instead of accelerating, the microplastics reduced the short-term
794‐
effects of the environmental contaminant bisphenol A (BPA) and polycyclic aromatic
795‐
hydrocarbons by adsorbing and lowering the concentrations of the residual
796‐
contaminants to which the zooplankton Daphnia magna and microorganisms were
797‐
exposed [153, 154]. It was even pointed out that the penchant for visibility, the
798‐
pressure to publish, the inability to publish negative results, the need for funding, and
799‐
sensationalism might have stimulated the exaggeration of microplastics research
800‐
[155].
801‐
Nevertheless, studies that failed to provide visible acute toxicity evidence could
802‐
not discount the possibility of long-term chronic environmental disturbance when
803‐
considering the ubiquity and persistence of microplastics. As an emerging topic, the
804‐
different obscure microplastic-induced impacts could be easily overlooked. For
805‐
instance, one study found no evidence of increased mortality, impacted reproductive
806‐
parameters or morphological changes in the water flea Daphnia magna [156];
807‐
however, further observation revealed the alteration of gene expression as a stress
808‐
response. Additionally, nonlethal effects and reproductive interference were observed
28‐ ‐
809‐
in Hydra attenuata, and disruption of feeding behaviors and changes to morphology
810‐
were observed that were certainly caused by microplastics [99]. On the one hand, the
811‐
transfer of PCBs from microplastics under simulated gut fluid conditions is fully
812‐
biphasic and reversible, even decreasing the bioavailability of the chemicals present in
813‐
the gut [157]. On the other hand, the ingestion of microplastics enhances the PAH
814‐
biomagnification due to the reduction in the fraction of PAHs available for
815‐
metabolization [158]. Organisms have been shown to respond to microplastic toxicity
816‐
in minor and diverse ways, and the complexity of the actual environment and the
817‐
insufficient consideration by unsound studies could lead to ambitious conclusions.
818‐
With decades of work, more research has started to conduct experiments with
819‐
environmentally relevant parameters [159], and attempts have also been made to
820‐
determine the true environmentally relevant toxicity by analyzing the microplastic
821‐
debris from the susceptible organisms stranded on beaches [147]. The potential
822‐
impacts of microplastics on organisms and the environment had been revealed
823‐
gradually, and the possibility for transfer among different trophic levels and food
824‐
webs has been studied and confirmed [11, 124]. Without a better understanding of the
825‐
ecological consequences triggered by microplastics, it may not be urgent to push the
826‐
government to implement harsh bans on the use of microbeads; however, intense
827‐
management of microplastic contamination should be encouraged.
828‐
For now, the interference of microplastics may appear to be an unimpressive
829‐
“minor disease” for the aquatic ecosystem: irritating, yet with unclear and
830‐
nondestructive consequences. The insufficient attention paid may eventually make
831‐
this issue more serious; when the occurrence of severe consequences appears to be
832‐
solid, we will owe the future generation an explanation for why we neglected this
833‐
problem. Several reviews have discussed and explained that microplastics present no
834‐
risk to the aquatic environment (Adam et al. 2018, Besseling et al. 2018, Burns et al.
835‐
2018), and the attention from different perspective during this debate should be
836‐
regarded as an opportunity to broaden the collective knowledge and should encourage
837‐
researchers to further advance the toxicological studies of microplastics. Therefore,
29‐ ‐
838‐
we further emphasize the significance of studying microplastic contamination of
839‐
different biota in various environmental settings. Researchers should consider
840‐
focusing not only on the identification of the effects on the specific species but also on
841‐
the broader ecological implications of the effects of microplastics. Based on decades
842‐
of microplastic toxicological studies and the shortcomings discussed, the following
843‐
perspectives are suggested for future research:
844‐
1) Instead of presenting the common physiological parameters of microplastics
845‐
and the response of organisms generally, the comprehensive consideration of
846‐
the potential impacts should be considered based on the features of the
847‐
microplastics and the behavioral and biological characteristics of organisms.
848‐
2) Multiple species of organisms and types of microplastics should be used for
849‐
toxicological risk assessments, and not only the acute toxicity but also the
850‐
sublethal chronic endpoints and the ecotoxicological investigations at
851‐
different trophic levels should be considered further.
852‐
3) A database of the microplastic toxicity for different biota should be developed
853‐
systematically, and the adaptability of the existing toxicological analysis
854‐
models for microplastics should be tested. 4) The joint toxicity with environmental contaminants and the long-term
855‐
ecological consequences should be further investigated.
856‐ 857‐
5) Standardized methodology for the analysis of microplastic contamination and
858‐
toxicology should be regulated, and a parallel comparison with different
859‐
research should be conducted to advance the understanding of the general
860‐
toxicity pattern of microplastics.
861‐
The present review not only presented an overview introduction for all
862‐
researchers investigating of the potential impacts of microplastics but also provided a
863‐
framework for researchers to complete their work more systematically.
864‐ 865‐
Acknowledgments
866‐
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
867‐
(No. 41772264) and the Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Geohazard 30‐ ‐
868‐
Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection (SKLGP2018Z001)
31‐ ‐
Table 1. The translocation of microplastic within different species (a. Biological response reported in the research; b. Potential impact proposed in the literature)
Species
Translocation spot
Biological response & Potential impact
Ref.
Bivalve mussel Mytilus edulis (L.)
circulatory system, Restricting blood flow causing damage to the vascular tissues and [35] hemolymph changes in cardiac activity b
Invertebrate Daphnia Magna
lipid storage droplets
Fiddler crab Uca rapas
Reducing ecosystem service (e.g., processing of organic matter) gills, stomach, due to the low performance of organisms, leading to far-reaching [161] hepatopancreas consequences for the coastal habitats b
Decreasing energy reserves for metabolism and growth; Transfer [160] from mother to newly created egg b
Hemolymph, tissues Bioaccumulation and biomagnification during the trophic transfer Mussel Mytilus edulis (L.) Shore crab Carcinus Stomach, gills, and between mussel and crab, leading to vulnerable larval and juvenile [124] Maenas stages of the crab a ovary Gilt-head seabream Sparus Aurata
Liver, muscles
Causing inflammation, lipid accumulation, oxidative stress at [162] higher exposure concentration b
Zebrafish larvae
The heart region
Triggering systemic immune responses
European anchovies Engraulis encrasicolus, L
Hepatic Tissue
Leaching chemicals (adsorbed pollutants and additives) into the [163] blood and other organs; enhanced vascular thrombosis b
Barnacle larvae Amphibalanus Amphitrite
Bloodstreams to Included in metamorphosis and settled into the juvenile form, tissue and other parts persisting in other parts of the body and tissues throughout stages [164]. of the body of growth and development a
Blue Mussel Mytilus edulis L.,
Adopted into cells of Causing significant effects on the tissue and cellular levels, [165]. the digestive system histological changes, and inflammatory response a
32‐ ‐
[22]
Table 2. The combined effects of the inorganic and organic pollutants adsorbed on the surface of the microplastic
Inorganic
Microplastic
Pollutant
Species
Toxic effect
The acute toxicity test showed PS Abnormalities, including Polystyrene/Polyst exhibited a slight antagonistic effect on Ni Daphnia Magna immobilization and changes in yrene-COOH Ni toxicity, whereas PS-COOH had a morphology. synergistic effect with Ni. Accumulated the metal in the brain and muscles, causing European Fluorescence red neurotoxicity, oxidative stress Preadsorption for Hg on the seabass polymer Hg and damage, and changes in the microplastic accumulated the Dicentrarchus microspheres activities of energy-related accumulation of Hg in tissues. labrax enzymes in juveniles of this species. MPs and natural organic matter aggravated the accumulation and zebrafish Danio Accumulation in tissue and toxicity of Cu. The levels of Polystyrene Cu rerio toxicity to guts and liver. malonaldehyde and metallothionein were increased, and the superoxide dismutase was decreased. Accumulated Ag between the rainbow trout four intestinal compartments of No disturbance effect on the Polyethylene Ag Oncorhynchus the mucus layer, mucosal accumulation mykiss epithelium, muscle layer, and serosa. Polychlorinat Lugworm Bioaccumulation and influence Microplastic contributed marginally to Polyethylene ed biphenyls Arenicola feeding activity bioaccumulation. (PCBs) marina (L.) 33‐
‐
Combination Effect
Ref.
[62]
[166]
[167]
[168]
[169]
Polyvinyl chloride
Organic
Polyethylene microbeads (MP)
Chiral antidepressan t venlafaxine and its metabolite O-desmethyl venlafaxine (pharmaceuti cals) Triclosan (TCS) hydrophobic organic contaminants (HOC)
polyethylene (PE), polystyrene (PS), Triclosan polyvinyl chloride (TCS) (PVC), and PVC800 Procainamid Red fluorescent e and polymer doxycycline microspheres (pharmaceuti cals) Fluorescent POPs microplastic polycyclic
Loach Misgurnus anguillicaudatu s
Microplastic facilitated the transfer and Accumulating in loach tissues bioaccumulation of contaminants to the [170] and liver subcellular. liver and postpone the contaminants metabolism in organisms
Marine copepod Acartia tonsa Bioaccumulation metabolic Microplastic potentiates TCS-mediated [171] (Dana) activity and mortality. toxicity due to the adsorption capacity.
Microalgae Skeletonema costatum
Toxicity of microplastics on microalgae mainly resulted from physical damage, and the triclosan showed inhibition effect on the growth of microalgae.
marine microalga Tetraselmis chuii
Toxicological interaction with Reduced growth rate and the microplastic increased the adverse [173] chlorophyll concentration. toxic effect.
Artemia nauplii Desorb in the intestine and Functioned as a vector to facilitate the [174] and transferred to the intestinal contaminant transfer at different 34‐
‐
Th Joint toxicity of TCS and microplastic was all antagonism, and the antagonistic effects increased with [172] the higher adsorption capacity of triclosan
particles
aromatic hydrocarbon benzo[a]pyre ne (BaP)
zebrafish
epithelium and liver
Bioaccumulation of phenanthrene-derived residues in Polystyrene plastic 14C-phenanth Daphnia Magna daphnia body and inhibited the particles rene dissipation and transformation of phenanthrene in the medium. Accumulation in hemolymph, gills and especially digestive Polycyclic mussel tissues. alterations of Polyethylene (PE) Aromatic Mytilus immunological responses, Polystyrene (PS) Hydrocarbon galloprovinciali lysosomal compartment, s (PAHs) s peroxisomal proliferation, antioxidant system, neurotoxic effects, the onset of genotoxicity Japanese PAHs/PCBs/ Polyethylene (PE) medaka Oryzias PBDEs latipes Polyethylene (PE) Virgin industrial microplastic Benzo[a]pyre Polypropylene Fish cell line extract has no toxic effect on fish ne (PP) cell line
35‐ ‐
trophic levels
The adsorption capacity enhances the [175] toxicity
Adsorption elevate bioavailability and [176] toxicological pathway of the chemicals
Altered the functioning of the [112] endocrine system in aquatic animal Benzo[a]pyrene coated extracts increase EROD activity and DNA damage
Fig. 1. The microplastics resembling the prey were more likely to be ingested (blue microplastic debris ingested due to the confusion with the blue copepods [34]) (Obtained copyright permission, Science of The Total Environment, Elsevier, 4543940873342, Mar 07, 2019)
36‐ ‐
Fig. 2. The molecular structures of the most common microplastics and the interactions with environmental contaminants
37‐ ‐
Fig. 3. a. The microplastics translocated within the zebrafish larvae away from the injection site [22] (obtained copyright permission, Aquatic Toxicology, Elsevier, 4543950272607, Mar 07, 2019); b. accumulation of polystyrene microbeads in the gills, liver, and gut of Eriocheir sinensis [177] (obtained copyright permission, Aquatic Toxicology, Elsevier, 4543950630725, Mar 07, 2019).
38‐ ‐
Fig. 4. The overall framework for the toxicological mechanism and the ecological implication: the microplastic enters the marine food chain and transfers throughout the different trophic levels; the environmental pollutants adsorb on the microplastics or the plastic additives and are released after ingestion; the widespread microplastics affect the individuals, then the population, before finally disturbing the community structure and function.
39‐ ‐
Fig. 5. The result microplastic toxicity on ecology
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50‐ ‐
Highlights
MPs properties determined bioavalibility and toxicity Spatical and temporal dynamic affect MPs ingestion by organism A series of damage and physiological response caused by MPs ingestion MPs disturbance showed potential of triggering ecological consequences
Microplastics in Aquatic Environments: Toxicity to Trigger Ecological Consequences
Ma Hui 1, 2, Pu Shengyan1, 3, 4,*, Liu Shibin1, Bai Yingchen3, Sandip Mandal1, Xing Baoshan4 1
State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection (Chengdu University of Technology), Chengdu 610059, Sichuan, China;
2
Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Thorvaldsensvej 401871 Frederiksberg, Denmark
3
State Key Laboratory of Environmental Criteria and Risk Assessment, Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, Beijing 100012, China
4
Stockbridge School of Agriculture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, United States
The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.
*
Corresponding author at: State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection (Chengdu University of Technology), Chengdu 610059, PR China. Tel./fax: +86 (0) 28 8407 3253; E-mail:
[email protected];
[email protected] (S.Y. Pu);
[email protected](B. Xing) Notes: The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.