Microplastic in the food chain – Food Safety and Environmental aspects
Abstract
Plastic is ubiquitous in our environment. It has been an incredibly useful and indispensable
material in all aspects of human life and without it many advances in medicine, technology
or industry would not have been possible, however, the accessibility and low cost of this
material has led to global misuse. The chemical makes up of plastic has made it very easy to
manufacture but unfortunately difficult to reuse or recycle and the result is that it is thrown
away as litter, incinerated or disposed of in landfill. Hence the rise of “single use plastics”,
of the plastic waste produced between 1950 and 2015 only 9% was recycled.
There are multiple sources of plastic pollution in the environment, from direct littering,
drainage systems, landfill waste, ocean dumping, blow off etc. The plastic, once in the
environment begins to degrade through weathering and exposure to UV light eventually
reaching very small sizes. Many animals mistake these particles for food and so the plastic
enters a marine, terrestrial or freshwater food web.
These microplastic particles although chemically inert have been shown to act as tiny
“biosponges” for harmful chemicals found in the environment such as PBP (Penicillin
binding proteins), fire retardants, microbial drugs etc. changing the nature of a plastic particle
from chemically harmless to potentially toxic if ingested in large quantities. Initially it was
believed that these particles would simply pass through the GI tract of animals and humans
with no biological effect, however studies have shown that they are sometimes taken up and
distributed throughout the circulatory system and lymphatic system and may in fact be stored
in the fatty tissues of birds, plankton, mussels, fish and even humans.
The result of the uptake of these toxins showed potential carcinogenic effects, liver
dysfunction and endocrine disruption in many laboratory experiments.
In this literature review the main focus will be on micro- and nanoplastics and how these tiny
particles make their way into marine and freshwater food webs with particular attention to
microplastic trophic transfer, their toxic side effects and how they may influence the human
consumer in health and safety in the future.