0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Multi-Interacting Natural and Anthropogenic Stressors on Freshwater Ecosystems: Their Current Status and Future Prospects for 21st Century

Water 2024 56 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 70 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Doru Bănăduc, Juergen Geist, Paulo Branco, Doru Bănăduc, S. A. Afanasyev, Verónica Laura Lozano, Doru Bănăduc, Daniel F. Gomez Isaza, Angela Curtean-Bănăduc, Juergen Geist, Doru Bănăduc, Angela Curtean-Bănăduc, Angela Curtean-Bănăduc, Juergen Geist, Juergen Geist, Juergen Geist, Doru Bănăduc, Sophia Barınova, Angela Curtean-Bănăduc, Juergen Geist, Verónica Laura Lozano, S. A. Afanasyev, Tamara Leite, Doru Bănăduc, Doru Bănăduc, Paulo Branco, Doru Bănăduc, Doru Bănăduc, Doru Bănăduc, Snežana Simić, Daniel F. Gomez Isaza, Juergen Geist, Aristoteles Tegos, Aristoteles Tegos, Snežana Simić, Horea Olosutean, Kevin Cianfanglione, Kevin Cianfanglione

Summary

This review examines how multiple environmental stressors including pollution, climate change, invasive species, and nanoparticles are simultaneously degrading freshwater ecosystems worldwide. The combined effects of these stressors, including microplastic contamination, threaten both the ecological health of freshwater systems and the clean water supplies that human civilization depends on.

Study Type Environmental

The inheritance of historic human-induced disruption and the fierceness of its impact change aquatic ecosystems. This work reviews some of the main stressors on freshwater ecosystems, focusing on their effects, threats, risks, protection, conservation, and management elements. An overview is provided on the water protection linked to freshwater stressors: solar ultraviolet radiation, thermal pollution, nanoparticles, radioactive pollution, salinization, nutrients, sedimentation, drought, extreme floods, fragmentation, pesticides, war and terrorism, algal blooms, invasive aquatic plants, riparian vegetation, and invasive aquatic fish. Altogether, these stressors build an exceptionally composite background of stressors that are continuously changing freshwater ecosystems and diminishing or even destroying their capability to create and maintain ongoing natural healthy products and essential services to humans. Environmental and human civilization sustainability cannot exist without the proper management of freshwater ecosystems all over the planet; this specific management is impossible if the widespread studied stressors are not deeply understood structurally and functionally. Without considering each of these stressors and their synergisms, the Earth’s freshwater is doomed in terms of both quantitative and qualitative aspects.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper