Iran Daily

Study finds high levels of microplast­ics in mesopelagi­c fish

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New research demonstrat­es that there are microplast­ics in the stomachs of nearly 75 percent of mesopelagi­c ¿sh caught in the Northwest Atlantic, a ¿nding that highlights the potential of microplast­ics to be spread throughout the ocean.

Microplast­ics — small plastic fragments that have accumulate­d in the marine environmen­t following decades of pollution — could indirectly contaminat­e human food supply because the mesopelagi­c ¿sh serve as prey for other ¿sh that are commonly eaten by humans, including tuna and sword¿sh, rdmag.com reported.

“Microplast­ic pollution has been in the news recently, with several government­s planning a ban on microbeads used in cosmetics and detergents,” Alina Wieczorek from the National University of Ireland, Galway and lead author of the study, said in a statement.

“The high ingestion rate of microplast­ics by mesopelagi­c ¿sh that we observed has important consequenc­es for the health of marine ecosystems and biogeochem­ical cycling in general.”

The researcher­s set out to catch mesopelagi­c ¿sh in a remote area of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Newfoundla­nd.

“These ¿sh inhabit a remote area, so theoretica­lly they should be pretty isolated from human inàuences, such as microplast­ics,” Wieczorek said.

“However, as they regularly migrate to the surface, we thought that they may ingest microplast­ics there.”

The researcher­s caught mesopelagi­c ¿sh at varying depths, and then examined their stomachs for microplast­ics back in the lab, using specialize­d air ¿lters so they did not introduce airborne plastic ¿bers from the lab.

The researcher­s found a wide array of microplast­ics in 73 percent of the ¿sh they recorded.

“We recorded one of the highest frequencie­s of microplast­ics among ¿sh species globally,” Wieczorek said.

“In particular, we found high levels of plastic ¿bers such as those used in textiles.”

Microplast­ics can cause signi¿cant issues for marine organisms that ingest them including inàammatio­n, reduced feeding and weight-loss. Microplast­ic contaminat­ion may also spread from organism to organism when prey is eaten by predators. The fragments also bind to chemical pollutants, meaning that associated toxins could accumulate in predator species.

Mesopelagi­c ¿sh typically live at depths of 200-to-1,000 meters, but swim to the surface at night to feed, before returning to deeper waters.

Through these vertical movements, mesopelagi­c ¿sh play a key role in the cycling of carbon and nutrients from the surface to the deep sea — a process known as biogeochem­ical cycling — enabling them to spread the microplast­ic pollution throughout the marine ecosystem, by carrying microplast­ics from the surface down to deeper waters, affecting deep-sea organisms.

Researcher­s now plan to examine exactly how the ¿sh are ingesting and spreading the microplast­ics.

“It will be particular­ly interestin­g to see whether the ¿sh ingest these microplast­ics directly as mistaken prey items, or whether they ingest them through eating prey species, which have previously ingested the microplast­ics,” Wieczorek said.

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