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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. Marine & Wildlife Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

Unraveling the threat: Microplastics and nano-plastics' impact on reproductive viability across ecosystems

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 44 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yiming Li, Ji Liang, Ji Liang, Mingming Han, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yi Juin Tay, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yi Juin Tay Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Mingming Han, Tian Zhu, Ji Liang, Feng Ji, Tian Zhu, Tian Zhu, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Ji Liang, Yiming Li, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Feng Ji, Tian Zhu, Yi Juin Tay Ji Liang, Ji Liang, Yi Juin Tay, Yiming Li, Hong Wang, Hong Wang, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Tian Zhu, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Tian Zhu, Ji Liang, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Ji Liang, James Rubinstein, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Yiming Li, Yiming Li, Tian Zhu, James Rubinstein, Tian Zhu, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Tian Zhu, Richard Worthington, Richard Worthington, Yi Juin Tay Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Yi Juin Tay, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Yiming Li, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Tian Zhu, Tian Zhu, James Rubinstein, Yiming Li, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, James Rubinstein, Ji Liang, Ji Liang, Feng Ji, Richard Worthington, Yi Juin Tay Hong Wang, Mingming Han, Richard Worthington, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Yi Juin Tay, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Yiming Li, Andrew J.T. George, Chenxin Zhu, Chenxin Zhu, Anisah Lee Binti Abdullah, Hong Wang, Yiming Li, Andrew J.T. George, Yiming Li, Mingming Han, Yi Juin Tay, Yi Juin Tay

Summary

This review summarizes research on how microplastics and nanoplastics affect reproduction across many species, from aquatic invertebrates to mammals including humans. In males, exposure leads to testicular damage, lower sperm quality, and hormone disruption; in females, it causes ovarian and uterine problems, inflammation, and reduced fertility. The evidence also shows these reproductive harms can be passed to offspring, raising serious concerns about long-term effects on human fertility.

Plastic pollution pervades both marine and terrestrial ecosystems, fragmenting over time into microplastics (MPs) and nano-plastics (NPs). These particles infiltrate organisms via ingestion, inhalation, and dermal absorption, predominantly through the trophic interactions. This review elucidated the impacts of MPs/NPs on the reproductive viability of various species. MPs/NPs lead to reduced reproduction rates, abnormal larval development and increased mortality in aquatic invertebrates. Microplastics cause hormone secretion disorders and gonadal tissue damage in fish. In addition, the fertilization rate of eggs is reduced, and the larval deformity rate and mortality rate are increased. Male mammals exposed to MPs/NPs exhibit testicular anomalies, compromised sperm health, endocrine disturbances, oxidative stress, inflammation, and granulocyte apoptosis. In female mammals, including humans, exposure culminates in ovarian and uterine deformities, endocrine imbalances, oxidative stress, inflammation, granulosa cell apoptosis, and tissue fibrogenesis. Rodent offspring exposed to MPs experience increased mortality rates, while survivors display metabolic perturbations, reproductive anomalies, and weakened immunity. These challenges are intrinsically linked to the transgenerational conveyance of MPs. The ubiquity of MPs/NPs threatens biodiversity and, crucially, jeopardizes human reproductive health. The current findings underscore the exigency for comprehensive research and proactive interventions to ameliorate the implications of these pollutants.

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