INVESTIGADORES
GONZALEZ PISANI Ximena
artículos
Título:
Plastics in scene: a review of the effect of plastics in aquatic crustaceans
Autor/es:
GONZÁLEZ- PISANI X.; STURLA LOMPRÉ JULIETA; PIRES ADILIA; LÓPEZ GRECO L. S
Revista:
ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Editorial:
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2022
ISSN:
0013-9351
Resumen:
Plastic pollution in aquatic environments is present in all compartments from surface water to benthic sediment, becoming a topic of emerging concern due to the internalization, retention time, and its effects on aquatic biota. Crustacea with nearly 70000 species, broad distribution and different roles in the trophic webs is a significant target of the increasing plastic pollution. At least 98 publications in the last 10 years report the impact of plastics in crustaceans, all suggesting that this taxon is at high risk for ecosystem disadvantage by plastic contamination loads. This review compiles the current knowledge on physiological effects (endpoints) by plastic contamination analyzed in crustaceans in the last 10 years, highlighting their use as model species for ecotoxicological tests, sentinels species and bioindicators. Plastic contamination analyzed in this review includes macroplastic, microplastic, and nanoplastic, in a wide variety of types. The studies were focused on 38 marine species with an economic interest in fisheries and aquaculture; 14 freshwater with a higher frequency in standard test species and 4 estuarial and 3 mangrove species with ecological interest. The publications reviewed were divided into studies describing plastic presence in crustaceans without reporting toxic effects and those with analysis of plastic toxicity. Publications describing the plastic presence in the organisms show the ingestion as the most frequent endpoint in individual effects and food-web transfer endpoint in ecological effects. The publications analyzed plastic toxicity through survival, nutrition-metabolism-assimilation, and reproduction as the most frequent endpoints in individual effects, and bioaccumulation endpoints in ecological effects. This review gathers the available information on the use of crustaceans as model species in environmental impact for toxicity screening and hazard assessment. Besides, identifying knowledge gaps will let us propose some future directions in research and the effects on target fisheries species which involves a possible effect on human health.