This study evaluated the uptake of secondary nano-and small microparticles by the protozoan Spirostomum ambiguum, comparing edible (baker’s yeasts) and inedible (red latex) particles. Secondary nano-and microplastic particles were prepared from household materials made of four different polymers and served to the protozoans separately and as two-component mixtures in different proportions. The number and content of food vacuoles formed by the protozoan were analyzed using a digital microscope. The microscopic results showed that the protozoans ingested the secondary microplastic particles to a similar degree as the latex microspheres but to a lesser extent compared to the nutritional food—baker’s yeasts. At the microplastic concentrations of 1000 and 10,000 particles mL−1, no food vacuoles were observed inside the cells, which may be a finding of great ecological importance. In the protozoans served two-component mixtures, both microplastics and yeasts were found in the vacuoles formed by the organisms. The egestion of two-component vacuoles by the protozoans was slower than that of vacuoles containing a single component.
CITATION STYLE
Nałęcz-Jawecki, G., Chojnacka, J., Wawryniuk, M., & Drobniewska, A. (2021). Influence of nano-and small microplastics on ciliated protozoan spirostomum ambiguum (Müller, 1786) ehrenberg, 1835. Water (Switzerland), 13(20). https://doi.org/10.3390/w13202857
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