Microplastics as a vehicle of exposure to chemical contamination in freshwater systems: Current research status and way forward

Contamination by microplastics is increasing steadily worldwide, affecting all environments. Additionally, aquatic organisms are often exposed to mixtures of other contaminants, including various chemicals. Numerous studies reported adsorption of chemicals to microplastics, raising concern about the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2021-09, Vol.417, p.125980-125980, Article 125980
Hauptverfasser: Eder, Miriam Lena, Oliva-Teles, Luis, Pinto, Raquel, Carvalho, António Paulo, Almeida, C. Marisa R., Hornek-Gausterer, Romana, Guimarães, Laura
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Contamination by microplastics is increasing steadily worldwide, affecting all environments. Additionally, aquatic organisms are often exposed to mixtures of other contaminants, including various chemicals. Numerous studies reported adsorption of chemicals to microplastics, raising concern about their possible role as vehicles of exposure through transfer to biota. Nevertheless, until recently, the studies on the topic were mostly focused on the marine environment. In the past five years, however, plenty of publications contributed empirical data about freshwater ecosystems, raising the need for a critical appraisal of the information. Herein the scientific literature was reviewed and multivariate data analysis was done. The analysed studies employed widely different experimental designs, endpoints, test species, shapes and concentrations of various polymer types and chemicals, often not relevant for the freshwater environment. Our integrated analytical approach revealed unfathomable research gaps, given the theoretical knowledge available and lessons learned from research about the marine environment. Greater harmonization of laboratory studies investigating this topic is needed, as well as testing conditions reflecting real exposure scenarios. Furthermore, standardized testing protocols are urgently required to guide such experiments and improve the comparability of the results obtained. [Display omitted] •Microplastics role as a vehicle of chemicals to freshwater biota is still not clear.•Review and analysis of available data were done to identify main contributing factors.•Experimental design, test species and endpoints assessed differ greatly among studies.•Most species, polymer shapes and concentrations tested lack environmental relevance.•Testing guidelines are urgently needed to improve research quality and comparability.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.125980