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Faculty Opinions recommendation of Microplastics in the coral reefs and their potential impacts on corals: A mini-review.
Summary
This is a faculty opinion summarizing a mini-review on microplastics in coral reefs, noting the research gap around reef-specific impacts and calling for more targeted studies on how microplastics affect coral health, feeding, and reproduction. Coral reefs are biodiversity hotspots that support hundreds of millions of people.
Plastic debris exists worldwide and research on microplastic pollution has gradually spread from the oceans to freshwater and terrestrial systems. Coral reefs not only serve as one of the most charismatic and biodiverse ecosystems on our planet, but also maintain the human harvesting of natural resources and livelihoods of hundreds of millions of people. However, the abundance and distribution characteristics of microplastics in coral reef systems receive little scientific attention. Meanwhile, the impacts of microplastics and nanoplastics on coral health and its potential mechanisms remain further studied. Herein, this review first summarized the current status of microplastics pollution in global coral reefs, especially included (i) abundance and distribution characteristics of microplastics in different media (e.g., seawater, sediment, corals), and (ii) possible sources of microplastics in reef regions. Furthermore, the main interaction mechanisms between microplastics and corals are highlighted. Following this, the direct or indirect impacts of microplastics on coral species are discussed. With the rapid increase of plastic consumption and background of pervasive global coral bleaching, research on marine microplastics must focus on the critical coral reef regions and include a comprehensive knowledge about the distribution, fate, and potential risks from an ecosystem perspective.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. PMID: 33172634
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