Microplastics in mussels sampled from coastal waters and supermarkets in the United Kingdom
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-11, 11:46 authored by J. Li, C. Green, A. Reynolds, H. Shi, Jeanette RotchellJeanette Rotchell<p>Global contamination of the marine environment by plastic has led to the discovery of microplastics in a range of marine species, including those for human consumption. In this study, the presence of microplastics and other anthropogenic debris in seawater and mussels (Mytilus edulis) from coastal waters of the U.K., as well as supermarket sources, was investigated. These were detected in all samples from all sites with spatial differences observed. Seawater samples taken from 6 locations (in triplicates) displayed 3.5 ± 2.0 debris items/L on average (range: 1.5–6.7 items/L). In wild mussels sampled from 8 locations around the U.K. coastal environment, the number of total debris items varied from 0.7 to 2.9 items/g of tissue and from 1.1 to 6.4 items/individual. For the supermarket bought mussels, the abundance of microplastics was significantly higher in pre-cooked mussels (1.4 items/g) compared with mussels supplied live (0.9 items/g). Micro-FT-IR spectroscopy was conducted on 136 randomly selected samples, with 94 items characterized. The spectra found that 50% of these debris items characterized were microplastic, with an additional 37% made up of rayon and cotton fibers. The microplastic levels detected in the supermarket bought mussels present a route for human exposure and suggests that their quantification be included as food safety management measures as well as for environmental monitoring health measures. Microplastics in seawater, coastal mussels and supermarket mussels. © 2018 Elsevier Ltd</p>
History
School affiliated with
- College of Health and Science (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Environmental PollutionVolume
241Publisher
Elsevier LtdExternal DOI
ISSN
2697491Date Accepted
2018-05-11Usage metrics
Categories
Keywords
AnimalsEnvironmental MonitoringFood ContaminationHumansMytilus edulisPlasticsSeafoodSeawaterSpectroscopy, Fourier Transform InfraredUnited KingdomWater Pollutants, ChemicalGossypium hirsutumMytilusDebrisEnvironmental managementMarine pollutionMicroplasticRetail storesShellfishplasticsea waterCoastal environmentsFood safety managementGlobal contaminationHuman consumptionMicroplasticsSpatial differencesbioaccumulationbivalvecoastal waterfood consumptionfood safetymarine pollutionmussel cultureplastic wastepollutant sourceshellfishsupermarketanimal tissueArticlecoastal watersconcentration (parameters)controlled studyFourier transform infrared spectroscopygeographic distributionmarine speciesnonhumansoft tissuewater contaminationwater samplinganalysisanimalchemistryenvironmental monitoringfood contaminationhumaninfrared spectroscopysea foodwater pollutantMolluscs
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