Microplastic contamination in coral reef fishes and its potential risks in the remote Xisha areas of the South China Sea

Microplastics are recognized as a newly emerging threat to marine organisms as they can be ingested and accumulated through multiple trophic levels. However, microplastic contamination and its potential risk assessment in coral reef fishes have been less addressed, particularly in remote ocean regio...

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Published in:Marine pollution bulletin Vol. 186; p. 114399
Main Authors: Huang, Lei, Li, Qian P., Li, Hengxiang, Lin, Lang, Xu, Xiangrong, Yuan, Xiaojie, Koongolla, Jayamini B., Li, Huawei
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-01-2023
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Summary:Microplastics are recognized as a newly emerging threat to marine organisms as they can be ingested and accumulated through multiple trophic levels. However, microplastic contamination and its potential risk assessment in coral reef fishes have been less addressed, particularly in remote ocean regions. In this study, microplastics in 167 samples of coral reef fish (a total of eighteen species) from the Xisha areas of the South China Sea were studied. There were fifteen species of coral reef fish contaminated by microplastics with an average occurrence rate of 29.3 %. The shape of microplastics in the fishes was mostly fibrous with small sizes (400–900 μm) and light colors (transparent and blue). The dominant types of microplastic polymers are polyamide and polyethylene terephthalate, accounting for 77 % and 11 % of microplastics in the fish body. There were generally more microplastics in the herbivorous fishes than the carnivorous ones. The highest microplastic abundance and occurrence was found in parrotfish due to its direct feeding on the microplastics-contaminated corals. In addition, there were much more microplastics in the gastrointestinal tracts than in the gills of the Xisha fishes. Microplastic abundance was found negatively correlated with the trophic level of the Xisha fishes supporting a stronger microplastic impact at lower levels of marine animals. Finally, a risk assessment using the polymer hazard index (PHI) revealed that microplastic contamination in the Xisha fishes was lower than those in the eutrophic coast. Our study provides new evidence for the widespread presence of microplastic contamination in the fishes of the remote Xisha coral reefs. [Display omitted] •Microplastic characteristics in the fish of the remote Xisha reefs are identified.•Microplastic abundance negatively correlates with the trophic level of the Xisha fish.•Risk of microplastic contamination in Xisha fish is lower than the eutrophic coast.
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ISSN:0025-326X
1879-3363
DOI:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.114399