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 Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Nanoplastic toxicity towards freshwater organisms

Water Emerging Contaminants & Nanoplastics 2022 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Roberto Rosal Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Miguel Tamayo-Belda, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Gerardo Pulido‐Reyes, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Francisca Fernández‐Piñas, Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal Roberto Rosal

Summary

This systematic review covers nanoplastic toxicity toward freshwater organisms, examining both conventional and bioplastic nanoplastics, and finds that size, shape, and surface chemistry all influence toxicity across a range of invertebrate and vertebrate freshwater species.

Polymers
Study Type In vivo

The fragmentation of plastic litter into smaller fragments, known as microplastics and nanoplastics, as well as their toxicity and environmental distribution have become issues of high concern. Furthermore, the popularization of bioplastics as a greener substitute of conventional plastics represents a challenge for the scientific community in view of the limited information concerning their potential environmental impact. Here, we systematically review the recent knowledge on the environmental fate and toxicity of nanoplastics in freshwater environments, discuss the results obtained thus far, and identify several knowledge gaps. The sources and environmental behaviors of nanoplastics are presented considering in vitro, in vivo, and in silico studies with a focus on real exposure scenarios. Their effects on organisms are classified based on their impact on primary producers, primary consumers, and secondary consumers. This review covers the main results published in the last four years, including all relevant experimental details and highlighting the most sensitive toxicity endpoints assessed in every study. We also include more recent results on the potential environmental impact of biodegradable plastics, a type of material belonging to the category of bioplastics for which there are still scarce data. This review identifies a need to perform studies using secondary nanoplastics rather than synthetic commercial materials as well as to include other polymers apart from polystyrene. There is also an urgent need to assess the possible risk of nanoplastics at environmentally realistic concentrations using sublethal endpoints and long-term assays.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper