4.7 Article

Dual drive acute lethal toxicity of methylene blue to Daphnia magna by polystyrene microplastics and light

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 840, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156681

Keywords

Microplastics; Methylene blue; Mixture; Phototoxicity; Daphnia magna; Singlet oxygen; Photosensitive

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Founda-tion of China [21936004, 52172277]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province of China [2020A1515010933]
  3. Pearl River Talent Plan of Guangdong Province of China [2107GC010344]

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This study investigates the influence of microplastics on the phototoxicity of photosensitive pollutants and finds that microplastics significantly enhance the phototoxicity of a soluble blue dye. This enhancement is positively correlated with the concentration of microplastics and may be due to the high level of singlet oxygen generated in the gut area.
Microplastics (MPs) can adsorb and influence the toxicity of traditional pollutants significantly. Although the complex toxicity of MPs and molecular pollutants were frequently reported, rare work has been done on the influence of MPs on the phototoxicity of photosensitive pollutants under light illumination condition. Herein, polystyrene microplastics (PS) (~1 mu m in diameter, 5.0 mg/L) was used as a model MP to investigate its influence on the phototoxicity of a soluble blue dye, methylene blue (MB) using Daphnia magna as a model organism. The results indicate that PS could adsorb MB effectively and quickly, thus led to concentrated MB on PS/water interface. D. magna ingested MB-adsorbed PS very quickly within tens of minutes. Although MB or PS alone led to negligible lethal phototoxicity to D. magna, PS significantly enhanced the lethal phototoxicity of MB (0.25 mg/L) to D. magna after light illumination (10 h) with the survival rate decreased by 63.3 % compared with the control in the dark. Further, the phototoxicity of MB was found positively consistent with PS concentration from 0.50 mg/L to 7.50 mg/L. The singlet oxygen fluorescence assay indicates that the presence of PS did not increase the total amount of singlet oxygen in the aquatic environment but increased the local concentration in the gut area via non-selective ingestion of D. magna. High level singlet oxygen generated in the gut might possibly be the main reason that led to the massive death of D. magna. Surface adsorption of photosensitive pollutants may transform inert MPs into persistent solid sources of singlet oxygen production and become a new potential lethal threat to aquatic small organisms and ecological equilibrium. This kind of MPs and light dual drive phototoxicity of photosensitive pollutants needs to paid more attention in understanding the uncertain ecological risk of MPs.

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