Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates

Microfibre pollution is an escalating environmental issue, with natural fibres found in greater abundance than their synthetic counterparts in the environment. This study examines the ingestion and retention of microfibres by two freshwater macroinvertebrates, Gammarus pulex and Corbicula fluminea,...

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Main Author: Evans, Isobel
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80732/
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author Evans, Isobel
author_facet Evans, Isobel
author_sort Evans, Isobel
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Microfibre pollution is an escalating environmental issue, with natural fibres found in greater abundance than their synthetic counterparts in the environment. This study examines the ingestion and retention of microfibres by two freshwater macroinvertebrates, Gammarus pulex and Corbicula fluminea, under varying conditions of fibre type, biofilm presence, water turbidity, and exposure time. Ecotoxicity tests revealed significant ingestion of both polyester and cotton microfibres, with species-specific retention and ingestion patterns that differed with fibre type. For G. pulex, polyester fibres exhibited longer retention, while cotton fibres were ingested in larger quantities. The presence of biofilms enhanced fibre ingestion, indicating a key role in retention. Notably, G. pulex continued ingesting microfibres over one- and two-week exposure periods, suggesting no learning avoidance of microfibre consumption. C. fluminea ingested consistently low number of microfibres throughout all experiments, suggesting that selective feeding mechanism of suspension feeding bivalves may limit the risk of microfibre ingestion. These findings underscore the environmental risks posed by both natural and synthetic microfibres and highlight the need for further research, particularly on natural fibres, to assess their ecological impacts at environmentally relevant concentrations.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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language English
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spelling nottingham-807322025-07-25T04:40:08Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80732/ Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates Evans, Isobel Microfibre pollution is an escalating environmental issue, with natural fibres found in greater abundance than their synthetic counterparts in the environment. This study examines the ingestion and retention of microfibres by two freshwater macroinvertebrates, Gammarus pulex and Corbicula fluminea, under varying conditions of fibre type, biofilm presence, water turbidity, and exposure time. Ecotoxicity tests revealed significant ingestion of both polyester and cotton microfibres, with species-specific retention and ingestion patterns that differed with fibre type. For G. pulex, polyester fibres exhibited longer retention, while cotton fibres were ingested in larger quantities. The presence of biofilms enhanced fibre ingestion, indicating a key role in retention. Notably, G. pulex continued ingesting microfibres over one- and two-week exposure periods, suggesting no learning avoidance of microfibre consumption. C. fluminea ingested consistently low number of microfibres throughout all experiments, suggesting that selective feeding mechanism of suspension feeding bivalves may limit the risk of microfibre ingestion. These findings underscore the environmental risks posed by both natural and synthetic microfibres and highlight the need for further research, particularly on natural fibres, to assess their ecological impacts at environmentally relevant concentrations. 2025-07-25 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80732/1/IE_Thesis_20240925_V2.pdf Evans, Isobel (2025) Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. textile fabrics--environmental aspects microfibre pollution microfibers pollution marine pollution biofilms
spellingShingle textile fabrics--environmental aspects
microfibre pollution
microfibers pollution
marine pollution
biofilms
Evans, Isobel
Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
title Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
title_full Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
title_fullStr Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
title_short Assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
title_sort assessing the influence of fibre type and biofilms on the ingestion and retention of microfibres by freshwater invertebrates
topic textile fabrics--environmental aspects
microfibre pollution
microfibers pollution
marine pollution
biofilms
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80732/