Accumulation of marine microplastics along a trophic gradient as determined by an agent-based model
Authored by Richard Stafford, Rosamund L Griffin, Lain Green
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2018.04.003
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://www.rickstafford.com/plastic_models.html
Abstract
Microplastics are ubiquitous in the marine environment and are now
consistently found in almost all marine animals. This study examines the
rate of accumulation in a modelled filter feeder (mussels) both from
direct uptake of microplastics and from direct uptake in addition to
trophic uptake (via consuming plankton which have consumed microplastic
themselves). We show that trophic uptake plays an important role in
increasing plastic present in filter feeders, especially when
consumption of the plastic does not reduce its overall abundance in the
water column (e.g. in areas with high water flow such as estuaries).
However, we also show that trophic transfer increases microplastic
uptake, even if the amount of plastic is limited and depleted, as long
as plankton are able to reproduce (for example, as would happen during a
plankton bloom). If both plankton and plastic are limited and reduced in
concentration by filter feeding, then no increase in microplastic by
trophic transfer occurs, but microplastic still enters the filter
feeders. The results have important implications for large filter
feeders such as baleen whales, basking and whale sharks, as these
animals concentrate their feeding on zoo plankton blooms and as a result
are likely to consume more plastic than previous studies have predicted.
Tags
Ecosystem
plankton
zooplankton
Impacts
Trophic ecology
Organisms
Ingestion
Mussel
Microplastic
Filter feeder
Trophic
transfer