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
Plastics and microplastics in the oceans: From emerging pollutants to emerged threat
Marine Environmental Research2016
1180 citations
?
Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 60
?
0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Francesco Regoli
Stefania Gorbi,
Stefania Gorbi,
Carlo Giacomo Avio,
Stefania Gorbi,
Francesco Regoli
Summary
This review examines the growing threat of plastic and microplastic pollution across the world's oceans, covering sources, distribution, and ecological impacts. Researchers note that while plastic debris has been found in every ocean basin, quantitative estimates remain limited, especially in the Southern Hemisphere and remote regions. The study highlights that ingestion and entanglement by marine organisms are well documented but that subtler effects like chemical transfer and habitat alteration need much more investigation.
Study Type
Environmental
Plastic production has increased dramatically worldwide over the last 60 years and it is nowadays recognized as a serious threat to the marine environment. Plastic pollution is ubiquitous, but quantitative estimates on the global abundance and weight of floating plastics are still limited, particularly for the Southern Hemisphere and the more remote regions. Some large-scale convergence zones of plastic debris have been identified, but there is the urgency to standardize common methodologies to measure and quantify plastics in seawater and sediments. Investigations on temporal trends, geographical distribution and global cycle of plastics have management implications when defining the origin, possible drifting tracks and ecological consequences of such pollution. An elevated number of marine species is known to be affected by plastic contamination, and a more integrated ecological risk assessment of these materials has become a research priority. Beside entanglement and ingestion of macro debris by large vertebrates, microplastics are accumulated by planktonic and invertebrate organisms, being transferred along food chains. Negative consequences include loss of nutritional value of diet, physical damages, exposure to pathogens and transport of alien species. In addition, plastics contain chemical additives and efficiently adsorb several environmental contaminants, thus representing a potential source of exposure to such compounds after ingestion. Complex ecotoxicological effects are increasingly reported, but the fate and impact of microplastics in the marine environment are still far to be fully clarified.