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A multi-factor analysis evaluating the toxicity of microplastics on algal growth

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Julia Sansing, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Julia Sansing, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Aleksandra Karapetrova, Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan Jay Gan

Summary

This meta-analysis evaluated how microplastic characteristics such as polymer type, size, shape, and concentration influence algal growth, finding that effects range from inhibition to enhancement depending on multiple interacting factors.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Marine and freshwater bodies are the primary destinations of microplastics (MPs), where MPs can interact closely with algae. Here, we synthesized existing literature on the effect of MPs on algal growth. Studies examining the effects of MPs on algal growth have yielded conflicting results. Some studies reported growth inhibition, whereas others showed no significant effect or even growth enhancement. Data from 71 studies in the subject area were evaluated using cross-tables, scatterplots, and chi-square tests of independence, and four factors (polymer type, algal type, MP size, MP concentration) likely influencing the observations were identified. Experiments using certain polymers of plastic, such as polyvinyl chloride, and algal phyla, such as Chlorophyta, were more likely to show growth inhibition. Higher MP concentrations were more likely to reduce algal growth, which was further amplified by exposure time. However, MP size appeared to exhibit a nonlinear relationship with algal growth inhibition, suggesting that different MP sizes may elicit different effects. Finally, this review highlights the need for more standardized data collection and analysis methods as well as future research focused on exploring the possible mechanisms of growth hindrance and algae exposure to environmentally relevant conditions.

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