- University of Amsterdam - Netherlands,
- Stockholm University - Sweden
Plastic pollution has become a major environmental concern among the public and government agencies, and in recent years the presence of microplastics in aquatic and terrestrial systems worldwide has received increasing attention. Microplastics are generally defined as polymer particles, fibres or fragments, smaller than 5 mm. The risks they may pose to environmental and human health are not yet fully determined, but concerns have been raised due to their ubiquitous presence in the environment, their persistence, the possibility of leaching of potentially harmful additives and their potential uptake by biota. Even though microplastics have been detected in sea and fresh waters, sediments, soils and organisms around the world, exposure data is currently far from sufficient to inform risk assessment. The main open questions relate to actual environmental concentrations in different locations, the distribution of microplastics between different environmental compartments, their speciation in natural systems, the different exposure patterns displayed by different microplastics and the identification of dominant transport pathways.
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Knowledge Gaps
Characteristics of plastic-general
Environmental fate and behavior of plastic
Degradation
Environmental effects and ecotoxicity
Chronic or long-term effects, multiple forms and/or sources
