2014
DOI: 10.7287/peerj.preprints.603v1
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Ingestion of plastics at sea: does debris size really matter?

Abstract: Most of our knowledge on plastic ingestion by zooplankton comes from experiments exposing invertebrates to plastic particles smaller than their feeding apparatus. By examining millimetre-sized marine plastics using a scanning electron microscope, we putatively identified some surface textures as feeding marks produced by invertebrates grazing upon the plastic biofilm. We observed sub-parallel linear scrapes with 5-14 μm spacing, which is similar to typical distances between teeth of the mandibular gnathobases … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Several biological processes are suspected to affect LDP debris throughout the water column. Kooi et al 20 theorized a progressive colonisation of LDP, which is expected to decrease and eventually cease below the euphotic layer (due to mineralization or scraping of plastics by copepods 72 ). Also, fragmentation fosters the slowdown of settling LDP debris, as the vertical sinking velocity decreases with decreasing debris size.…”
Section: Implications Frommentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several biological processes are suspected to affect LDP debris throughout the water column. Kooi et al 20 theorized a progressive colonisation of LDP, which is expected to decrease and eventually cease below the euphotic layer (due to mineralization or scraping of plastics by copepods 72 ). Also, fragmentation fosters the slowdown of settling LDP debris, as the vertical sinking velocity decreases with decreasing debris size.…”
Section: Implications Frommentioning
confidence: 99%