PEI

Are microplastics ending up in Atlantic lobster? This researcher hopes to find out

An assistant professor in Nova Scotia has been awarded a five-year grant to study the double impact of microplastics and climate change on aquatic organisms. 

Nova Scotia prof receives grant to study the effects of the tiny pollutants on lobster larvae

A close view of a lobster.
Jordan Park will lead new research on the double impact of microplastics and climate change in the Lobster Quality Laboratory at Université Sainte-Anne in Nova Scotia. (Paul Pickett/CBC)

An assistant professor in Nova Scotia has been awarded a five-year grant to study the double impact of microplastics and climate change on aquatic organisms. 

Jordan Park will conduct the research at Université Sainte-Anne using lobster larvae and zooplankton. Park hopes to trace whether microplastics end up in lobster found in Atlantic waters.

The grant for his research is through the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Microplastics are tiny bits of plastic, many smaller than the diameter of a strand of hair. But they don't start out that small, said Park — plastic wares like food packages end up in the ocean and get broken down over time.

Microplastic particles look like speckles in a variety of colours and shapes.
'Through the weathering effect, they get degraded into smaller pieces which makes them microplastics, or even further down into nanoplastics,' says Park. (Janice Brahney)

"Through the weathering effect, they get degraded into smaller pieces, which makes them microplastics, or even further down into nanoplastics," Park told CBC P.E.I.'s Island Morning.  

"Since they're so small, they're easily being ingested with… other food sources or aquatic organisms." 

These microplastics can then make their way through the food chain. 

"Other... bigger organisms will eat the smaller organisms which already have ingested these microplastics," he said. "That will cause the biomagnification of microplastics within that organism." 

Jordan Park, an assistant professor at Universite Sainte-Anne in Nova Scotia, received a research grant to study how the combination of climate change and microplastics affects aquatic life. We speak with him about what he hopes to discover.  

That means an organism like a lobster might directly ingest microplastics, or it might ingest them indirectly by eating something like a zooplankton with microplastics in its system. 

That's why Park's research will compare both scenarios by exposing lobster larvae to microplastics directly, in addition to exposing the larvae to zooplankton that have had exposure to microplastics. 

Identifying exposure

There are certain biomarkers that indicate whether organisms have ingested microplastics, Park said, like the plastics' presence in the gastrointestinal tract. 

A  silvery creature is in a petri dish, with food seen in its gut.
Park says the zooplankton he works with are smaller than two centimetres and can ingest nanoplastics smaller than 50 nanometres. (Mukul Sharma)

"Once the GI tract gets obstructed by these accumulated nanoplastics or microplastics, I'm pretty sure they will cause this imbalance of the microbiome within it," he said. 

"That will contribute to the changes in their quality… such as immune system and other stress-related proteins." 

The climate change connection 

Park said he's been talking to many fishermen who have noticed differences in the number of lobsters they catch every year.

Microplastics are visible under the carapace of this lobster larvae.
Microplastics are visible under the carapace of this lobster larvae. (Madelyn Woods/Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences)

But his research isn't focused on the accumulation of microplastics in the lobsters, rather the effects of organisms being exposed to pollutants like microplastics while also being exposed to climate change. 

The kind of research he's doing will allow him to assess various factors in a controlled environment. 

"In the real environment situation, [lobsters are] not only exposed to one factor," he said.

"That is why I'm factoring in the climate change, temperature, pH in salinity, plus the pollutants such as microplastics."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gwyneth Egan is a digital writer at CBC P.E.I. She previously interned with White Coat, Black Art and holds a master of journalism degree from Carleton University. You can reach her at gwyneth.egan1@cbc.ca

With files from Island Morning