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Effects of pollution on marine organisms

Water Environment Research 2020 35 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Alan J. Mearns, Ann M. Morrison, Courtney Arthur, Nicolle Rutherford, Matt Bissell, Mary Ann Rempel‐Hester

Summary

This annual review synthesizes 2019 research on how pollutants affect marine and estuarine organisms, covering topics from oil spill toxicity and endocrine disruptors to the growing body of work on microplastic ingestion across hundreds of marine species. It serves as a comprehensive reference for marine pollution biology from that year.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Abstract This review covers selected 2019 articles on the biological effects of pollutants, including human physical disturbances, on marine and estuarine plants, animals, ecosystems, and habitats. The review, based largely on journal articles, covers field, and laboratory measurement activities (bioaccumulation of contaminants, field assessment surveys, toxicity testing, and biomarkers) as well as pollution issues of current interest including endocrine disrupters, emerging contaminants, wastewater discharges, marine debris, dredging, and disposal. Special emphasis is placed on effects of oil spills and marine debris due largely to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil blowout in the Gulf of Mexico and proliferation of data on the assimilation and effects of marine debris microparticulates. Several topical areas reviewed in the past (e.g., mass mortalities ocean acidification) were dropped this year. The focus of this review is on effects, not on pollutant sources, chemistry, fate, or transport. There is considerable overlap across subject areas (e.g., some bioaccumulation data may be appeared in other topical categories such as effects of wastewater discharges, or biomarker studies appearing in oil toxicity literature). Therefore, we strongly urge readers to use keyword searching of the text and references to locate related but distributed information. Although nearly 400 papers are cited, these now represent a fraction of the literature on these subjects. Use this review mainly as a starting point. And please consult the original papers before citing them.

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