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Review: Environmental toxicology of marine microplastic pollution — R1/PR7
Summary
This review comprehensively examines marine microplastic toxicology, covering how microplastics accumulate in organisms from phytoplankton to fish and cause harm across molecular, biochemical, and physiological levels. It also emphasises the role of microplastics as carriers of toxic chemical additives and adsorbed pollutants, making them a compounded environmental hazard throughout ocean ecosystems.
Over the past decade, there have been increasing recognition and concern of the toxicological impacts of microplastics (MPs) in the environment, which have been widely found in various marine environments from estuary to deep oceans. Numerous toxicological studies have been conducted on the impacts of MPs on various marine organisms, especially phytoplankton, zooplankton, bivalves, and fish of different trophic levels. These studies mainly focused on the measurements of MPs bioaccumulation and their resulting biological impacts at molecular, metabolic, biochemical, physiological, and organismic levels. This review examines the various studies conducted over the recent years on the toxicology of MPs in different marine organisms, particularly on the bioaccumulation and toxicity of MPs. The impacts of MPs on marine organisms are diverse, and the complexity of organism physiology as well as MPs physical and chemical properties need to be considered. Future studies should consider the environmental relevance of toxicological research and the development of quantitative tools to model the transport, bioaccumulation, and toxicity of MPs. These are important for the real environmental risk assessments of MPs in the marine environments.
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