posted on 2020-05-18, 17:07authored byElvis
Genbo Xu, Rachel S. Cheong, Lan Liu, Laura M. Hernandez, Agil Azimzada, Stéphane Bayen, Nathalie Tufenkji
Nanoplastics
(NPs; <0.1 μm) are speculated to be a bigger
ecological threat due to their predicted wider distribution, higher
concentrations, and bioavailability. Primary NPs are manufactured
to be that size, while secondary NPs originate from fragmentation
of bigger debris. To date, the long-term impact of NPs in freshwater
systems, particularly secondary NPs, is not well-understood. Thus,
we employed a freshwater invertebrate, Daphnia magna, to investigate the chronic effects of model primary NPs, fluorescent
polystyrene nanospheres (PS-NPs; 20 nm), and water leachate of weathered
single-use plastics that contained micro- and nanosized particles.
In experiment 1, parent Daphnia (F0)
were exposed to 1 and 50 mg/L PS-NPs until the production of the neonates
(F1) followed by a two-generation recovery. PS-NPs were mainly detected
in the intestine and brood chamber in F0 and transferred to F1 and
F2. PS-NPs significantly decreased the appendage curling and heartbeat
rate in F0 and reduced reproduction in F2. In experiment 2, the plastic
leachate also reduced the appendage curling rate but increased growth
and reproduction. The results suggest that the acute toxicity of primary
and secondary plastic particles is low even at high concentrations,
but their chronic and sublethal effects should not be overlooked.