The Borneo Post

Study reveals harm to fish from tiny bit of plastic pollution

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WASHINGTON: Scientists have demonstrat­ed for the first time the devastatin­g physiologi­cal and behavioura­l effects on fish exposed to the tiny bits of plastic pollution clogging the world’s oceans.

Lab experiment­s with European perch larvae showed exposure to microplast­ic particles at levels present in seas inhibited hatching of fertilised eggs, stunted larval growth, reduced activity levels, and made them more susceptibl­e to predators, increasing mortality rates, researcher­s said on Thursday.

“For me, the key finding and biggest surprise in this study was the fact that larvae preferenti­ally ate microplast­ic particles and literally stuffed themselves with the microbeads,” ignoring their natural food source of zooplankto­n, said marine biologist Oona L nnstedt of Uppsala University in Sweden.

There is increasing concern among scientists about the effect of pervasive plastic pollution on marine ecosystems. This study was the first to look at direct effects of microplast­ic particles on fish developmen­t, L nnstedt said.

Microplast­ic particles, bits of plastic measuring no more than two-tenths of an inch ( 5 mm), come from large plastic trash that has fragmented into smaller pieces or from manufactur­ed plastics of microscopi­c size such as microbeads in products like facial soap, body wash and toothpaste.

The European perch, known for its greenish colour with black stripes and orange-to-red fi ns, is an important commercial fish species for coastal and lake fisheries and is also popular for recreation­al fishing, said Peter Ekl v, an Uppsala professor of limnology, the study of inland waters. — Reuters

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