Abstract

The extent to which small plastics and potentially associated compounds are entering coastal food webs, especially in estuarine systems, is only beginning to be realized. This study examined an estuarine reach at the mouth of urbanized Chollas Creek in San Diego, California to determine: 1) the extent and magnitude of microplastics pollution in estuarine sediments and fish, 2) the extent and magnitude of SVOC contamination in estuarine fish, and 3) whether fish preferentially ingested certain types of microplastics, when compared with the microplastic composition of creekbed sediments. Surface sediments (0–5 cm depth) contained about 10,000 small plastic pieces per m2, consisting mostly (90%) of fibers, and hard and soft pieces. Nearly 25% of fish contained small plastics, but prevalence varied with size and between species. Of the 25 types of small plastics found in sediment, fish preferred about 10 types (distinct colors and forms). Several SVOCs, both water soluble and sediment-associated compounds, were found in the two species of fish tested. This study revealed that a species’ natural history may influence contamination levels, and warrants further study to better understand the pathways of plastics and associated contaminants into and throughout coastal food webs, and the potential health risks for small and/or low-trophic level organisms.

Highlights

  • Much research conducted over the last two decades has revealed that microplastics are pervasive in marine systems around the world [2,3]

  • Plastics in urban fish and sediments subwatershed, as it revealed densities of microplastics at the mouth of urbanized Chollas Creek that were 70–500 times greater (~10,000 pieces/m2) than those concurrently found in San Diego bay sediments and continental shelf sediments [10,72]

  • The microplastics densities found at the mouth of Chollas Creek were lower than those found further upstream; around the same time this study was conducted, an average of 13,000 microplastic pieces/m2 was found in a freshwater riparian reach of Chollas Creek about 3 km upstream from the study site, and averages of 18,000 and 46,000 pieces/m2 were found 5.5–6 km farther upstream in two seasonal tributaries [73]

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Summary

Introduction

Much research conducted over the last two decades has revealed that microplastics (plastic particles

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