2019
DOI: 10.3390/d11120228
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Microplastic Contamination Has Limited Effects on Coral Fertilisation and Larvae

Abstract: Microplastics are ubiquitous throughout the world’s oceans and contaminate coral reef ecosystems. There is evidence of microplastic ingestion by corals and passive contact with coral tissues, causing adverse health effects that include energy expenditure for particle removal from the tissue surface, as well as reduced growth, tissue bleaching, and necrosis. Here, it was examined whether microplastic contamination impairs the success of gamete fertilisation, embryo development and larval settlement of the reef-… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…verrucosa (200 particles/L (size 65-410 µm) for 6 months exposure) [81] as well as for A. millepora (4000 particles/L (size 37-163 µm) for 4 weeks) [82]. Also, no statistically significant effect was found on chlorophyll concentration in symbiont (five coral species, 5 or 50 particles/L (size 106-125 µm) for 28 days or 200 particles/L (size 65-410 µm) for 6 month exposure) [81,83] or on A. tenuis embryo development (gametes exposure at 5-200 particles/L (size 1 or 6 µm) for 3 h) [84]. However, exposure to polyethylene particles decreased tissue growth of Pseudodiploria clivosa and A. cervi- Chemical name and CAS number, risk of bias (L low , U unclear, or M medium), outcome (Fert fertilisation, Settl settlement, Bleach symbiont density, Photo symbiont photosynthesis and Mort mortality), temperature and pH conditions of the studies used to determine the TT, lowest TT concentration value in µg/L (nominal and effective when measured) and exposure duration in hour, reference value used to contextualise the TT and source of the reference value.…”
Section: Microplasticmentioning
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…verrucosa (200 particles/L (size 65-410 µm) for 6 months exposure) [81] as well as for A. millepora (4000 particles/L (size 37-163 µm) for 4 weeks) [82]. Also, no statistically significant effect was found on chlorophyll concentration in symbiont (five coral species, 5 or 50 particles/L (size 106-125 µm) for 28 days or 200 particles/L (size 65-410 µm) for 6 month exposure) [81,83] or on A. tenuis embryo development (gametes exposure at 5-200 particles/L (size 1 or 6 µm) for 3 h) [84]. However, exposure to polyethylene particles decreased tissue growth of Pseudodiploria clivosa and A. cervi- Chemical name and CAS number, risk of bias (L low , U unclear, or M medium), outcome (Fert fertilisation, Settl settlement, Bleach symbiont density, Photo symbiont photosynthesis and Mort mortality), temperature and pH conditions of the studies used to determine the TT, lowest TT concentration value in µg/L (nominal and effective when measured) and exposure duration in hour, reference value used to contextualise the TT and source of the reference value.…”
Section: Microplasticmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…pistillata (50 particles/L (size 106-125 µm) for 28 days) [83]. Regarding short-term exposure to polypropylene particles, no statistically significant effect was found on the embryo development of A. tenuis (gametes exposure at 5, 15 or 50 particles/L (size 0.5, 1 or 2 mm 2 ) for 3 h [84]. Overall, these studies on polyethylene suggest that the effects of this plastic compound on corals are species-specific, as well as concentration and duration dependent.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The level of knowledge around the effect of MNPs on corals remains unclear, and further research is required. Many negative impacts have been identified and include host-symbiont relationship, photosynthetic efficiency, tissue necrosis, calcification rates, energy demand, reproductive success and overall fitness [41,79,80,82,83,86,87,89,[92][93][94][95][96][97][98][99]. Perturbation of photophysiology, bleaching and tissue necrosis have been observed in laboratorybased studies in response to exposure to MNPs [79,85,89,96] and may demonstrate coral species-specificity.…”
Section: Association and Impact On Coral Reef Biotamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Microplastics may accumulate cause blockage in the gut or several species of organisms. This may induce gradual inflammations to organs [67,68]. Accumulation of microplastics also causes disruptions and decline to the production of oxygen from algae and microalgae [70] and have a disrupted effect in the consumption of zooplanktons [71].…”
Section: Microplastics-health Problems To Organismsmentioning
confidence: 99%