0
Meta Analysis ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 1 ? Systematic review or meta-analysis. Synthesizes findings across many studies. Strongest evidence. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Aging process potentially aggravates microplastic toxicity in aquatic organisms: Evidence from a comprehensive synthesis

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shaopan Bao, Bo Xian, Jiabao Yi, Chenyang Rao, Dongfang Xiang, Yan Wu, Fuhao Chu, Fuhao Chu, Wei Tang, Tao Fang

Summary

This meta-analysis found that environmental aging of microplastics significantly worsens their toxicity to aquatic organisms overall, particularly harming algae, zooplankton, and fish. However, the effect varied by organism type — aged microplastics were less toxic to aquatic plants. Aging methods, particle characteristics, and environmental conditions all modulated the severity of toxicity.

Body Systems
Study Type Review

Microplastics (MPs; <5 mm) will inevitably encounter aging processes after being released into the environment. However, the effect of aging on MPs toxicity in aquatic environment is still unclear despite that aging plays a critical role in changing MPs characteristics and behavior. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis to assess the effects of aging on MPs biotoxicity in aquatic environment. We found that aging displayed an overall aggravating effect (Hedges' g = -0.595, P < 0.05) on MPs toxicity in aquatic organisms, while the effects varied across different taxa; namely, aging potentially alleviates MPs biotoxicity to hydrophytes (Hedges' g = 0.383, P > 0.05) while significantly exacerbates MPs toxicity to other organisms, such as algae (Hedges' g = -0.784, P < 0.05), zooplanktons (Hedges' g = -0.366, P < 0.05), and fish (Hedges' g = -0.560, P < 0.05). Moreover, the aggravating effects of aging on MPs biotoxicity were closely related to biological traits (e.g., Hedges' g = -0.378 for growth and development, Hedges' g = -0.957 for metabolism, and Hedges' g = 0.054 for immune system). We further found that aging methods, MPs characteristics, and environmental designs were also crucial regulators for the aging impacts on MPs toxicity. Taken together, our findings demonstrated that aging process appears to boost MPs biotoxicity, and there are complex factors determining aging impacts on MPs biotoxicity. Given the persistent release of MPs and the aggravating effects of aging in aquatic environments, the risk posed by MPs should be carefully considered in the future.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

The aging of microplastics exacerbates the damage to photosynthetic performance and bioenergy production in microalgae (Chlorella pyrenoidosa)

Researchers found that aged microplastics are significantly more toxic to freshwater algae than new microplastics, inhibiting growth by up to 45% and causing greater damage to photosynthesis and energy production. Since algae form the base of aquatic food chains, this heightened toxicity from weathered microplastics could cascade through ecosystems and ultimately affect the safety of freshwater resources that humans depend on.

Article Tier 2

Nanoplastics in aquatic environments: The hidden impact of aging on fate and toxicity

This review highlights that most toxicity studies on nanoplastics use brand-new pristine particles, but real-world nanoplastics are aged by sunlight and chemical exposure, which fundamentally changes their surface properties and toxicity. Aged nanoplastics may be more harmful than pristine ones because they interact differently with biological systems, meaning current safety assessments likely underestimate the true risks.

Article Tier 2

Mechanistic insights into non-negligible toxicity evolution of microplastics under different aging processes

This review examines how different environmental aging processes, such as UV exposure, mechanical wear, and chemical weathering, change the physical and chemical properties of microplastics and alter their toxicity. Researchers found that aged microplastics and the chemicals they leach tend to be more harmful to organisms than fresh particles, causing growth inhibition and genetic damage. The findings suggest that the environmental risks of microplastics may increase significantly as they degrade over time.

Systematic Review Tier 1

How aging microplastics influence heavy metal environmental fate and bioavailability: A systematic review

This systematic review found that environmental aging (UV, weathering) degrades microplastics into smaller particles with higher surface reactivity, increasing their capacity to adsorb heavy metals. These aged microplastic-heavy metal complexes bioaccumulate through the food chain, posing greater ecological and human health risks than either pollutant alone.

Article Tier 2

Innovative overview of the occurrence, aging characteristics, and ecological toxicity of microplastics in environmental media

This review summarizes existing research on where microplastics are found in the environment, how they age and break down, and their toxic effects on living organisms. The paper highlights that as microplastics weather in the environment through sunlight and chemical exposure, they become smaller and can carry other pollutants, potentially increasing their health risks. It also covers emerging strategies for detecting and removing microplastics.

Share this paper