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. Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Marine Litter Plastics and Microplastics and Their Toxic Chemicals Components

2020 22 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Imogen Ingram, Frederic Gallo, Frederic Gallo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Frederic Gallo, Roland Weber, María Cristina Fossi Imogen Ingram, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, Frederic Gallo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi João Sousa, Roland Weber, Roland Weber, David Santillo, David Santillo, David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, João Sousa, Roland Weber, João Sousa, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, David Santillo, João Sousa, María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi Imogen Ingram, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi Imogen Ingram, Imogen Ingram, Imogen Ingram, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, Ángel Nadal, Ángel Nadal, María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Dolores Romano, David Santillo, Dolores Romano, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi Dolores Romano, Dolores Romano, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi David Santillo, María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi María Cristina Fossi

Summary

This review examined the chemical hazards posed by marine plastic litter and microplastics, focusing on persistent organic pollutants, flame retardants, plasticisers, and endocrine-disrupting additives that can leach from plastic polymers into marine food webs. The authors concluded that both the physical and chemical toxicity of marine plastics represent a serious and undercharacterised threat to biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, and human health via seafood consumption.

Body Systems

Persistent plastics, with an estimated lifetime for degradation of hundreds of years in marine conditions, can break up into micro- and nanoplastics over shorter timescales, thus facilitating their uptake by marine biota throughout the food chain. These polymers may contain chemical additives and contaminants, including some known endocrine disruptors that may be harmful at extremely low concentrations for marine biota, thus posing potential risks to marine ecosystems, biodiversity and food availability. Although there is still a need to carry out focused scientific research to fill the knowledge gaps about the impacts of plastic litter in the marine environment (Wagner et al. in Environ Sci Eur 2014, 26, 9), the food chain and human health, existing scientific evidence and concerns are already sufficient to support actions by the scientific, industry, policy and civil society communities to curb the ongoing flow of plastics and the toxic chemicals they contain into the marine environment. Without immediate strong preventive measures, the environmental impacts and the economic costs are set only to become worse, even in the short term. Continued increases in plastic production and consumption, combined with wasteful uses, inefficient waste collection infrastructures and insufficient waste management facilities, especially in developing countries, mean that even achieving already established objectives for reductions in marine litter remains a huge challenge, and one unlikely to be met without a fundamental rethink of the ways in which we consume plastics. This document was prepared by a working group of Regional Centres of the Stockholm and Basel Conventions and related colleagues intended to be a background document for discussion in the 2017 Conference of the Parties (COP) of the Basel Convention on hazardous wastes and the Stockholm Convention on persistent organic pollutants (POPs). The COP finally approved that the issue of plastic waste could be dealt with by its Regional Centres and consistently report their activities on the matter to the next COP's meetings.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper