Millennium Post

Microplast­ics threatenin­g giant ocean animals

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MELBOURNE: Microplast­ics in our oceans are posing a significan­t risk to filter-feeding marine animals like manta rays and whale sharks, especially in pollution hotspots like the Bay of Bengal, scientists have warned.

Researcher­s from Murdoch University in Australia and University of Siena in Italy said that microplast­ics could be hazardous because they contain toxic chemicals.

Plastic-associated chemicals and pollutants can accumulate over decades and alter biological processes in the animals, leading to altered growth, developmen­t and reproducti­on, including reduced fertility, according to the study published in the journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution.

While a definitive connection between microplast­ic ingestion and toxin exposure for filter feeders remains to be confirmed, studies into sea birds and small fish have found a link, said Elitza Germanov, a PHD student at Murdoch University. Marine filter feeders are likely to be at risk because they need to swallow hundreds to thousands of cubic metres of water daily in an effort to capture plankton.

They can ingest microplast­ics directly from polluted water or indirectly through contaminat­ed prey.

These species also tend to congregate in habitats which overlap with microplast­ic pollution hotspots, including the Gulf of Mexico, the Mediterran­ean Sea, the Bay of Bengal and the Coral Triangle, which is the marine area comprising the waters of South East Asian countries including Indonesia.

Indigestib­le plastic particles may damage the digestive systems of these iconic species, researcher­s said.

"Despite the growing research on microplast­ics in the marine environmen­t, there are only a few studies that examine the effects on large filter feeders," said Germanov.

"This is because it is difficult to assess plastic concentrat­ions via convention­al methods such as stomach analysis, because these are unsuitable for threatened species like whale sharks and manta rays," she said.

"So we are using non-lethal sampling of small amounts of tissue, which we are testing for chemical tracers using sophistica­ted and sensitive analytical tools," she added.

Maria Cristina Fossi from the University of Siena said that studies on whale sharks in the Gulf of California and on fin whales in the Mediterran­ean Sea confirmed exposure to toxic chemicals.

"As these areas are hotspots for microplast­ics, our results could indicate that filter feeders are taking up microplast­ics in their feeding grounds," she said.

Microplast­ic contaminat­ion had the potential to reduce population numbers of filter feeding animals, many of which are long-lived and have few offspring throughout their lives, said Germanov.

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