Microplastics in Indian squid (Uroteuthis duvaucelii ) in region 1, Philippines

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Research Paper 03/03/2026
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Microplastics in Indian squid (Uroteuthis duvaucelii ) in region 1, Philippines

John Dave B. Orpilla*
J. Biodiv. & Environ. Sci. 28(3), 1-7, March 2026.
Copyright Statement: Copyright 2026; The Author(s).
License: CC BY-NC 4.0

Abstract

Microplastic pollution threatens marine ecosystems and human health through seafood consumption in the Philippines. This study assessed the prevalence, abundance, and morphology of microplastics in the gastrointestinal tracts of Indian squid (Uroteuthis duvaucelii) from two major Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources – National Stock Assessment Program (BFAR-NSAP) landing sites in Region 1: Tubod, Sto. Tomas, La Union, and Port Sual, Pangasinan.​ Six specimens (n=3/site) underwent gastrointestinal tract dissection, 10% potassium hydroxide (KOH) digestion at 80°C for 48 hours, density separation, vacuum filtration, Nile red staining, and fluorescence. Prevalence reached 66.67% at Tubod (2/3 samples positive; up to 7 fragments and 6 fibers per specimen) versus 33.33% at Sual (1/3 positive; 3 mixed particles), with non-significant spatial differences (Fisher’s exact test, p=0.52) attributable to limited sample size (n=6). Fragments (50% or total particles; irregular, jagged shapes) and fibers (50% of total particles; linear morphology) dominated, all exhibiting <20 μm and intense orange fluorescence indicative of synthetic polymers and consistent spectral emission.​ Higher abundances at urban-proximal Tubod implicate riverine runoff, fishing gear microfiber shedding, and post-harvest contamination despite shared Lingayen Gulf fishing grounds, aligning with neritic squid vulnerability via contaminated prey. These baseline data highlight food safety risks from secondary microplastics and support SDG 14 (Life Below Water).​ Recommendations include routine BFAR-NSAP screening with expanded n≥10/site, μ-Raman spectroscopy for polymer identification, riverine plastic booms, gear audits, and Local Government Unit-led waste interventions at high-risk sites.

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