It’s in the water, but is it in our food supply?
What we know is that it is in our water supply, both fresh
and salt
water. Maia Mcguire, UF Extension agent for this area has done extensive research and data collection. Here is a link to
her Awareness Map .
She has concentrated mostly on sampling the water in and
around Florida.She is a wealth of information on the subject.
We know it's in
shellfish, and there was a study in England that documents
microplastics in 10 species of fish from the English
Channel. 504
Fish were examined and plastics found in the
gastrointestinal
tracts of 36.5%. (Lusher, 2017)
Scientific Question: Are
Microplastics found in the digestive tract
of bottom feeding fish?
Map of my fishing spots for this Independent Research
Project
Randomly chosen fishing spots 1-4 (right click open in new
tab)
Materials
•Fishing equipment
•Sample Preservation material/Ice, cooler
•GPS Unit/phone/Field Book(550f)
•Analysis Laboratory (microscope)
Methods
-Fish each spot at best times to catch fish, log pertinent
information with gps coordinates.
-catch fish, preserve intestinal tract,
-bring to the lab at school and
examine/measure/count microplastics, I will then graph and evaluate
Questions....Comments....Suggestions??
References:
•Lusher,
A. (2017). Occurrence of microplastics in the
gastrointestinal tract of
pelagic and demersal fish from the English
Channel.
Sciencedirect.com.
Retrieved 30 March 2017, from
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025326X1200
5668

What is this? Looks like a copy/paste from your slides to the blog...grrrrr....
ReplyDeleteI fixed it
ReplyDeletehopefully its better
Steve
Michelle, Section 201: Do you plan to study the same number of fish from each location? If so, how many fish?
ReplyDeleteMichelle, Section 201: Is there a limit to the number of microplastics found in fish for it to be considered safe to eat, and does the FDA test for it in seafood?
ReplyDelete