0
Review ? 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

The ecotoxicological consequences of microplastics and co-contaminants in aquatic organisms: a mini-review

Emerging Topics in Life Sciences 2022 42 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Nathaniel J. Clark, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Nathaniel J. Clark, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Nathaniel J. Clark, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Nathaniel J. Clark, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Farhan R. Khan, Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino Ana I. Catarino

Summary

This mini-review examined how microplastics interact with chemical co-contaminants including organic pollutants, trace metals, and pharmaceuticals in aquatic environments. The study highlights that microplastics can act as carriers that alter the bioavailability and toxicity of these chemicals to aquatic invertebrates and fish, and calls for more research on emerging particle types like tire wear particles and biodegradable plastics.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs, <5 mm in size) are a grave environmental concern. They are a ubiquitous persistent pollutant group that has reached into all parts of the environment — from the highest mountain tops to the depths of the ocean. During their production, plastics have added to them numerous chemicals in the form of plasticizers, colorants, fillers and stabilizers, some of which have known toxicity to biota. When released into the environments, MPs are also likely to encounter chemical contaminants, including hydrophobic organic contaminants, trace metals and pharmaceuticals, which can sorb to plastic surfaces. Additionally, MPs have been shown to be ingested by a wide range of organisms and it is this combination of ingestion and chemical association that gives weight to the notion that MPs may impact the bioavailability and toxicity of both endogenous and exogenous co-contaminants. In this mini-review, we set the recent literature within what has been previously published about MPs as chemical carriers to biota, with particular focus on aquatic invertebrates and fish. We then present a critical viewpoint on the validity of laboratory-to-field extrapolations in this area. Lastly, we highlight the expanding ‘microplastic universe’ with the addition of anthropogenic particles that have gained recent attention, namely, tire wear particles, nanoplastics and, bio-based or biodegradable MPs, and highlight the need for future research in their potential roles as vehicles of co-contaminant transfer.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper