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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

20th Pollutant Responses in Marine Organisms (PRIMO 20): Global issues and fundamental mechanisms caused by pollutant stress in marine and freshwater organisms

Aquatic Toxicology 2020 19 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.
Amy H. Ringwood, William S. Baldwin, Peter van den Hurk Peter van den Hurk Peter van den Hurk Peter van den Hurk Lisa J. Bain, Charles D. Rice, Charles D. Rice, Peter van den Hurk Peter van den Hurk Richard Di Giulio, Charles D. Rice, Seth W. Kullman, Richard Di Giulio, Amy H. Ringwood, Peter van den Hurk Charles D. Rice, Amy H. Ringwood, Amy H. Ringwood, Peter van den Hurk

Summary

This conference proceedings overview summarized novel toxicological research presented at the 20th PRIMO conference, highlighting emerging themes including microplastic and nanoplastic toxicity, climate change interactions with pollutant stress, and mechanistic studies of contaminant effects across marine and freshwater organisms.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

The 20th Pollutant Responses in Marine Organisms (PRIMO 20) conference provided a forum for scientists from around the world to communicate novel toxicological research findings specifically focused on aquatic organisms, by combining applied and basic research at the intersection of environmental and mechanistic toxicology. The work highlighted in this special issue of Aquatic Toxicology, a special issue of Marine Environmental Research, and presented through posters and presentations, encompass important and emerging topics in freshwater and marine toxicology. This includes multiple types of emerging contaminants including microplastics and UV filtering chemicals. Other studies aimed to further our understanding of the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and personal care products. Further research presented in this virtual issue examined the interactive effects of chemicals and pathogens, while the final set of manuscripts demonstrates continuing efforts to combine traditional biomonitoring, data from -omic technologies, and modeling for use in risk assessment and management. An additional goal of PRIMO meetings is to address the link between environmental and human health. Several articles in this issue of Aquatic Toxicology describe the appropriateness of using aquatic organisms as models for human health, while the keynote speakers, as described in the editorial below, presented research that highlighted bioaccumulation of contaminants such as PFOS and mercury from fish to marine mammals and coastal human populations such as the Gullah/GeeChee near Charleston, South Carolina, USA.

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