Microplastics pollution threatens Goa’s estuarine fisheries, human consumers, Pg2
Goa's estuarine fisheries face microplastic threat, bioaccumulation impacts fish health, potentially harming human consumers through food chain contamination.
A study identified 4,871 polluting particles in 251 fishes of nine species off the Goan coast [mackerel, anchovy, oyster, clam, catfish, sardine].
3,369 particles were plastic polymers of 19 types, mainly from degraded fishing material and wastewater.
Fish are suffering from disrupted gene expression, oxidative stress, reproductive damage, and lower growth.
Human consumption of contaminated fish could lead to immune dysfunction, higher risk of cancer, and brain toxicity.
Detailed Insights:
The study focused on the Mandovi estuarine system, which contributes to 97% of Goa’s fish output, using the bamboo shark as a focal species.
Anchovies had the highest microplastic concentration among pelagic species (8.8 MP/in), while catfish led the benthic realm (over 10 MP/in).
Fish with habitats closer to contaminated sediments ingested more microplastics, with the digestive tract being the primary ingestion pathway.
The study categorized the region as low-risk but placed benthic life at more risk, noting that 11 of the 19 polymer types identified were highly toxic.
Microplastics can indirectly affect coastal populations by lowering fish nutritional quality and threatening livelihoods due to decreased market demand.
Key Concepts Involved:
Bioaccumulation: The accumulation of substances, such as microplastics, in an organism.
Trophic transfer: The process by which microplastics move up the food chain.
Estuaries: Ecologically critical zones that nourish young fish and serve as feeding grounds.