Fish microplastic ingestion may induce tipping points of aquatic ecosystems

Author:

Qian Guangjing1,Zhang Lai1ORCID,Chen Yuxin1,Xu Chi2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Mathematical Science Yangzhou University Yangzhou China

2. School of Life Sciences Nanjing University Nanjing China

Abstract

Abstract Microplastics can be ingested by a wide range of aquatic animals. Extensive studies have demonstrated that microplastic ingestion—albeit often not lethal—can affect a range of species life‐history traits. However, it remains unclear how the sublethal effects of microplastics on individual levels scale up to influence ecosystem‐level dynamics through cascading trophic interactions. Here we employ a well‐studied, empirically fed three‐species trophic chain model, which was parameterized to mimic a common type of aquatic ecosystems to examine how microplastic ingestion by fish on an intermediate trophic level can produce cascading effects on the species at both upper and lower trophic levels. We show that gradually increasing microplastics in the ingested substances of planktivorous fish may cause population structure effects such as skewed size distributions (i.e. reduced average body length vs. increased maximal body size), and induce abrupt declines in fish biomass and reproduction. Our model analysis demonstrates that these abrupt changes correspond to an ecosystem‐level tipping point, crossing which difficult‐to‐reverse ecosystem degradation can happen. Importantly, microplastic pollution may interact with other anthropogenic stressors to reduce safe operating space of aquatic ecosystems. Our work contributes to better understanding complex effects of microplastic pollution and anticipating tipping points of aquatic ecosystems in a changing world. It also calls attention to an emerging threat that novel microplastic contaminants may lead to unexpected and abrupt degradation of aquatic ecosystems, and invites systematic studies on the ecosystem‐level consequences of microplastic exposure.

Funder

State Key Laboratory of Lake Science and Environment

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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