Sea anemones extract tin associated with polyvinyl chloride pre-production pellets
Zoie Diana, Megan Swanson, Danielle Brown, Jessica Wang, Jessica Zhao, Nelson A. Rivera, Heileen Hsu-Kim, Daniel Rittschof

TL;DR
Sea anemones that ate plastic pellets had higher tin levels, suggesting they can extract additives from plastics.
Contribution
This study shows that sea anemones can extract tin from plastic pellets, a novel finding about microplastic additive transfer in marine organisms.
Findings
Anemones consumed PVC pellets and shrimp-flavored PVC pellets equally, with similar feeding retention times.
Treatment anemones had significantly higher tin concentrations compared to controls, exceeding tin levels in the pellets.
The increased tin in anemones suggests accumulation from sources beyond the pellets, possibly from loosely associated additives.
Abstract
Marine animals consume microplastics; however, it remains unknown if plastic additives can be extracted from ingested microplastics. This research utilizes animal behavior experiments and analytical chemistry to determine if sea anemones consume plastic pre-production pellets and extract lead (Pb) and tin (Sn) additives from pellets. We compared the consumption of PVC pellets to shrimp-extract-flavored PVC pellets. The time from pellet ingestion to egestion (feeding retention time) averaged 7–10 hours and did not differ between untreated (83% of pellets consumed) and shrimp-flavored PVC pellets (100% of pellets consumed). Sequential feeding of the previously consumed pellets to new anemones rapidly decreased feeding retention time until pellets were no longer consumed. To determine if anemones could extract Pb and Sn additives, we ran additional feeding trials in which treatment…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution · Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry · Collagen: Extraction and Characterization
