1. Cellulosic and microplastic fibers in the Antarctic fish Harpagifer antarcticus and Sub-Antarctic Harpagifer bispinis.
- Author
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Ergas, Mauricio, Figueroa, Daniela, Paschke, Kurt, Urbina, Mauricio A., Navarro, Jorge M., and Vargas-Chacoff, Luis
- Subjects
PLASTIC marine debris ,TEXTILE fibers ,POLYETHYLENE fibers ,NATURAL fibers ,HUMAN settlements ,FIBERS ,BIODEGRADABLE plastics - Abstract
Human settlements within the Antarctic continent have caused significant coastal pollution by littering plastic. The present study assessed the potential presence of microplastics in the gastrointestinal tract of the Antarctic fish Harpagifer antarcticus , endemic to the polar region, and in the sub-Antarctic fish Harpagifer bispinis. H. antarcticus. A total of 358 microfibers of multiple colors were found in 89 % of H. antarcticus and 73 % of H. bispinis gastrointestinal track. A Micro-FTIR analysis characterized a sub-group (n = 42) of microfibers. It revealed that most of the fibers were cellulose (69 %). Manmade fibers such as microplastics polyethylene terephtalate, acrylics, and semisynthetic/natural cellulosic fibers were present in the fish samples. All the microfibers extracted were textile fibers of blue, black, red, green, and violet color. Our results suggest that laundry greywater discharges of human settlements near coastal waters in Antarctica are a major source of these pollutants in the Antarctic fish. [Display omitted] • 358 microfibers of multiple colors were found in the gastrointestinal tract of fish. • 69 % of microfibers were characterized as cellulose, followed by PET and acrylic microfibers. • 89 % of Harpagifer antarcticus gastrointestinal tract presented a high abundance of microfibers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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