4.7 Article

Ingestion and impact of microplastics on arctic Calanus copepods

Journal

AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY
Volume 228, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2020.105631

Keywords

Microplastics; Arctic copepods; Microplastic ingestion; Fecal pellet production; Egg production

Funding

  1. Danish Center for research into Marine Plastic Pollution (MarinePlastic) - Velux foundation [25084]
  2. Maritime DTU-Orients Fund [09.12.14]
  3. H2020 CLAIM project (Cleaning Litter by developing and Applying Innovative Methods in European seas) [774586]
  4. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [774586] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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Microplastics (MPs) are contaminants of emerging concern in the Arctic, but knowledge of their potential effects on Arctic plankton food webs remains scarce. We experimentally investigated ingestion and effects of MPs (20 Im polyethylene spheres) on the arctic copepods Calanus finmarchicus, C. glorious and C. hyperboreus. These species dominate arctic zooplankton biomass and are relevant target species to investigate the potential impacts of MPs on the Arctic marine ecosystem. Females of each species were exposed to two concentrations of MPs (200 and 20,000 MPs L-1) in combination with different food (diatom) concentrations, reflecting high (3000-5000 cells mL(-1), spring phytoplankton bloom) and low (50-500 cells mL(-1), pre/post bloom) food conditions. MPs did not affect negatively fecal pellet production rates in any of the species at the studied exposure concentrations. However, egg production rates of copepods exposed to MPs were 8 times higher compared with the controls, which suggests that MP exposure can cause stress-induced spawning in arctic copepods. Microscopic examination of the fecal pellets confirmed ingested MPs in the three species (up to aprox. 1000 MPs cop(-1) d(-1)). The number of MPs per pellet decreased exponentially with increasing food concentration. The daily ingestion of MPs per copepod was higher at low- food concentrations (250-500 cells mL(-1)). At our exposure conditions, the presence of MPs inside C. hyperboreus fecal pellets did not affect their sinking rates. Overall, our experimental research show that 1) acute exposure to virgin polyethylene MPs has a low impact on arctic Calanus species at environmentally relevant MP concentrations, independent of food availability, and 2) arctic copepods influence the environmental fate of plankton-sized MPs by exporting buoyant MPs from the surface layer to the sea floor via fecal pellets.

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