Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Plastisphere Promotes Gill-Rot Disease: A Retrospective Study on a Sudden Fish Mortality Incident.
- Journal:
- Environmental science & technology
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Li, Mengxi et al.
- Affiliation:
- College of Environmental Science and Engineering · China
Abstract
Plastisphere is a hotspot for some potential pathogens. Herein, a sudden incident of gill-rot disease in the Haihe River, China, is speculated to be related to the effects of the plastisphere. Significantly higher levels of microplastics (MPs) were present in the gills of dying carps identified with gill-rot disease, whilewas identified as the main pathogenic microorganism. A six-week simulated exposure experiment was conducted to further confirm the relationship among MPs,and the pathogens of gill-rot disease. At an exposure concentration reflecting environmental abundance, all four MPs─PET and PLA in fiber and granule forms─were found to promote-driven gill tissue damage, pathogen enrichment in the gills, and pathogenic metabolism. Compared to granular and nonbiodegradable PET MPs, fibrous PLA, which exhibited higher retention in the gills and greater microbial affinity, resulted in the highest disease incidence. For the first time, the risk of respiratory infectious diseases in aquatic animals caused by the plastisphere on MPs was presented and demonstrated.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40613387/