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Microplastics eaten by UK invertebrates are contaminating food chains

Microplastics eaten by UK invertebrates are contaminating food chains
A) Plot showing the percentage of invertebrate samples containing plastic A) taxonomic group; B) trophic level and C) land cover type. Figure D shows the proportion of soil samples containing plastic. Credit: Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (2025). DOI: 10.1093/etojnl/vgaf103

Plastic pollution is harming invertebrates at the bottom of the food chain, including beetles, slugs, snails and earthworms, according to a new study by the University of Sussex and the University of Exeter. More than 1 in 10 samples had fragments of plastic in their stomach, and harmful chemicals are being passed onto larger animals who feed on them.

Researchers analyzed more than 580 samples from 51 sites across Sussex. Microplastics were found in nearly 12%, with the highest levels recorded in earthworms (30%) and slugs and snails (24%). Polyester was the most common type of plastic found in the invertebrates tested, likely from clothing threads. The research is in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

The researchers say these findings show is not just a marine issue, and the chemicals released as plastics break down are equally dangerous when present in soil. have shown ingesting plastic can lead to stunted growth, reduced fertility and changes in liver, kidney, and stomach function in various species, raising alarm among conservationists.

While herbivores and organisms that feed on decaying had the highest contamination rates, carnivorous species such as ladybirds were also affected, often ingesting larger fragments of plastic. The findings raise new concerns about the long-term effects of plastic contamination and its impact on biodiversity.

"We were surprised by just how widespread this plastic contamination is," said lead author Emily Thrift, Ecology Doctoral Tutor at the University of Sussex. "This is the first study to find plastics consistently turning up across an entire community of land invertebrates. Similar plastic types were found in hedgehog feces in our earlier research and they seem to be entering the diet of birds, mammals, and reptiles via their invertebrate prey."

Co-author Prof Tamara Galloway of the University of Exeter said, "To reduce the uptake of microplastics into the food web we first have to understand how it is getting there. Emily's results are a crucial first step to understanding this process and its consequences for wildlife."

Prof Fiona Mathews, Environmental Biologist at the University of Sussex added, "Microplastics are now ubiquitous at every level of the food web. Attention is currently focused on litter as the main source of contamination, but these findings suggest multiple sources ranging from clothing to paint. There is now an urgent need to understand how different plastics are damaging ecosystems and to cut the volume entering the environment."

This is the most comprehensive study of its kind, spanning four levels of the food chain and six invertebrate groups to assess the full extent of plastic contamination in a land-based ecosystem.

More information: Emily Thrift et al, Microplastic contamination is widespread across invertebrate taxa frequently consumed by terrestrial vertebrates, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (2025).

Provided by University of Sussex

Citation: Microplastics eaten by UK invertebrates are contaminating food chains (2025, May 20) retrieved 24 May 2025 from /news/2025-05-microplastics-eaten-uk-invertebrates-contaminating.html
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