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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. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Leaching of endocrine disrupting chemicals from marine microplastics and mesoplastics under common life stress conditions

Environment International 2019 287 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Annika Allgeier, Qiqing Chen, Annika Allgeier, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Daqiang Yin, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Annika Allgeier, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Daqiang Yin, Annika Allgeier, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Daqiang Yin, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Daqiang Yin, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Daqiang Yin, Daqiang Yin, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Daqiang Yin, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Qiqing Chen, Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert Henner Hollert

Summary

Researchers measured the leaching of endocrine disrupting chemicals from marine microplastics and mesoplastics collected from the field under stress conditions that mimic real-world exposure. They found that bisphenol A was the most frequently detected compound, and that smaller plastic particles released greater quantities of these chemicals per unit mass. The study suggests that microplastics in the marine environment act as sources of hormone-disrupting substances that could affect wildlife and potentially human health.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) and mesoplastics are able to sorb harmful substances and often contain additives, e.g., endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), that can cause adverse effects to organisms. The present study aims to determine EDC concentrations and their endocrine activities in leachates of field-collected marine MPs and mesoplastics under stress conditions that are known to occur during the plastic life cycle. Estrogens were the dominant EDCs on plastic particles and were either concentrated from the surrounding water or originated from plastic manufacturing. Bisphenol A had the highest detection frequency (75%) with an average concentration of 475 ± 882 μg/kg, followed by bisphenol S, octylphenol and nonylphenol. Moreover, smaller marine MPs leached greater quantities of EDCs because the sorption from surrounding seawater is more efficient for smaller particles. It was found that normal life stresses such as microwaving (MW) and autoclaving (AC) can decrease EDC concentrations, but solar irradiation (solar) can increase EDC concentrations in leachates. Even though organisms with higher metabolic ability exhibited greater estrogenic effects, the comprehensive toxicity of plastic leachates after common life treatments was still limited (below the EC value) if 0.1% is taken as the EDC uptake from plastic. In future studies, the accurate contribution of plastic bound EDCs needs to be further explored, and the monitoring of MPs and mesoplastics in the human diet remains important because the concentrations of these plastics may change in the future.

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