Journal of Water and Environment Technology
Online ISSN : 1348-2165
ISSN-L : 1348-2165
Original Articles
Microplastic Ingestion by a Benthic Amphipod in Different Feeding Modes
Kyoshiro Hiki, Fumiyuki Nakajima
Author information
  • Kyoshiro Hiki

    Health and Environmental Risk Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Tsukuba, Japan

  • Fumiyuki Nakajima

    Environmental Science Center, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Corresponding author

ORCID
Keywords: plastic pollution, feeding type, microplastic ingestion, benthos, Grandidierella japonica
JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

2022 Volume 20 Issue 5 Pages 137-144

Details
  • Published: 2022 Received: May 26, 2022 Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2022 Accepted: August 16, 2022 Advance online publication: - Revised: -
Download PDF (2409K)
Download citation RIS

(compatible with EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)

BIB TEX

(compatible with BibDesk, LaTeX)

How to download citation
Contact us
Abstract

Microplastics adversely affect organisms through physical damage, inhibition of food assimilation, and/or toxicity of chemical leachates. We investigated the influence of feeding mode on microplastic ingestion by using polystyrene microbeads (diameter: 4.1 and 20.6 μm) and the estuarine benthic amphipod Grandidierella japonica, which can switch between filter-feeding and deposit-feeding modes. When provided with sediment, amphipods burrowed and were in the filter-feeding mode; they ingested 4.1 and 20.6 μm beads in the ratio at which the two sizes were suspended in the water. Without sediment, however, the amphipods were mainly in the deposit-feeding mode and ingested more 20.6 μm beads, which tended to be deposited on the bottom, compared with 4.1 μm beads. In addition, the number of microbeads ingested by the amphipods in sediment increased as the amount of food provided (i.e., fish food TetraMin) increased, whereas no such increase was observed for the amphipods without sediment. These results indicate that the microbead ingestion was dependent on feeding mode (i.e., presence/absence of sediment), amount of food, and distribution of microbeads (i.e., sizes of microbeads). To better understand the ingestion, accumulation, and toxicity of microplastics in aquatic environments, we recommend that more attention be paid to behavioral changes in benthic organisms.

References (32)
Related articles (0)
Figures (0)
Content from these authors
Supplementary material (0)
Result List ()
Cited by (3)
© 2022 Japan Society on Water Environment

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.ja
Previous article Next article
Favorites & Alerts

Recently viewed articles
Share this page
Top

Register with J-STAGE for free!

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /