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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. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Microplastic pollution a real global danger

Farmacist ro 2020 Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Magdalena Mititelu Alina Ţîntoc, Alina Ţîntoc, Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu Alina Ţîntoc, Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu Alina Ţîntoc, Ioana Pîntea, Ioana Pîntea, Ioana Pîntea, Ioana Pîntea, Elena Bălan, Elena Bălan, Elena Bălan, Elena Bălan, Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu A. Manea, A. Manea, Janina Orbeanu, Janina Orbeanu, Janina Orbeanu, Janina Orbeanu, Marius Sorinel Neacşu, Marius Sorinel Neacşu, Marius Sorinel Neacşu, Marius Sorinel Neacşu, Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu Magdalena Mititelu

Summary

This paper summarizes the global microplastic pollution crisis, noting that humans are exposed through food, drink, and air, with polyester fibers from synthetic textiles among the most common types found in the environment. It argues for preventive and corrective measures at the international and individual levels.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution in the oceans and inland waters is a serious problem that affects not only the aquatic environment, but also humans. People are potentially exposed to microplastics through food, drink and air. Polyester fiber is one of the most abundant types of microplastics in the environment. Much of the fiber that enters wastewater treatment plants reaches sewage sludge, which is used as soil fertilizer in many countries. Therefore, preventive and corrective measures should be taken at international, governmental and consumer level to assess the toxicity of common polymers, to reduce the use of plastic and to encourage the use of alternative materials, recycling and the adoption of sustainable practices in the use of plastics and plastic pollution management. There is growing evidence that microplastic pollution (plastic particles below 5 mm in size) is now present in almost all marine ecosystems, even in remote areas, such as the Arctic and Antarctic. Once released into the marine environment the ecological fate of microplastics primarily depends on the density of the polymer that influences buoyancy, position in the water column and possible interaction with the biota.

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