Microplastic pollution has been recognized as a potential threat to environmental and human health. Recent studies have shown that microplastics reside in all ecosystems and contaminate human food/water sources. Microplastic exposure has been shown to result in adverse effects related to endocrine disruption; however, data are limited regarding how exposure to current environmental levels of microplastics during development may impact reproductive health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTropical cyclones drive coastal ecosystem dynamics, and their frequency, intensity, and spatial distribution are predicted to shift with climate change. Patterns of resistance and resilience were synthesized for 4138 ecosystem time series from = 26 storms occurring between 1985 and 2018 in the Northern Hemisphere to predict how coastal ecosystems will respond to future disturbance regimes. Data were grouped by ecosystems (fresh water, salt water, terrestrial, and wetland) and response categories (biogeochemistry, hydrography, mobile biota, sedentary fauna, and vascular plants).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroplastic pollution is of public concern for global environmental health, aquaculture, and fisheries. Toxicity studies have shown that microplastic ingestion may cause intestinal damage, microbiota dysbiosis, and disturb the lipid and energy metabolism in fish. To determine the impact of environmentally relevant, chronic, low dose microplastic fibers on fish health, medaka larvae, and juveniles were exposed to five concentrations of polyethylene (PE) fibers for 21 days through the feed.
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