Ecological risks in a ‘plastic’ world: A threat to biological diversity?

Microplastics pollution is predicted to increase in the coming decades, raising concerns about its effects on living organisms. Although the effects of microplastics on individual organisms have been extensively studied, the effects on communities, biological diversity, and ecosystems remain underexplored. This paper reviews the published literature concerning how microplastics affect communities, biological diversity, and ecosystem processes. Microplastics increase the abundance of some taxa but decrease the abundance of some other taxa, indicating trade-offs among taxa and altered microbial community composition in both the natural environment and animals’ gut. The alteration of community composition by microplastics is highly conserved across taxonomic ranks, while the alpha diversity of microbiota is often reduced or increased, depending on the microplastics dose and environmental conditions, suggesting potential threats to biodiversity. Biogeochemical cycles, greenhouse gas fluxes, and atmospheric chemistry, can also be altered by microplastics pollution. These findings suggest that microplastics may impact the U.N. Sustainability Development Goals (SDGs) to improve atmospheric, soil, and water quality and sustaining biodiversity.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Agathokleous, Evgenios, Iavicoli, Ivo, Barceló, Damià, Calabrese, Edward J.
Other Authors: Barceló, Damià [0000-0002-8873-0491]
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-09-05
Subjects:Biological diversity, Volatile organic compounds, Ecological effects, Microplastics, Nanoplastics, Risk assessment,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/242434
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