Skip to content
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbon, Waste Water and Run-off
      • Trash
    • Shoreline Erosion | Coastal Armoring + Engineering
    • Dams, Sand Supply, and Habitat Recovery
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitats | Ecosystem Disturbance
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise | Ocean Acidification
    • Coastal Management | Adaptation | Policy
    • Coastal Storms | Extreme Weather
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbon, Waste Water and Run-off
      • Trash
    • Shoreline Erosion | Coastal Armoring + Engineering
    • Dams, Sand Supply, and Habitat Recovery
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitats | Ecosystem Disturbance
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise | Ocean Acidification
    • Coastal Management | Adaptation | Policy
    • Coastal Storms | Extreme Weather
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact

Day: November 28, 2023

Microplastic-eating plankton may be worsening crisis in oceans, say scientists – the Guardian

A colony of rotifers at 100x magnification (by Specious Reasons CC BY-NC 2.0 DEED via Flickr).

A type of zooplankton found in marine and fresh water can ingest and break down microplastics, scientists have discovered. But rather than providing a solution to the threat plastics pose to aquatic life, the tiny creatures known as rotifers could be accelerating the risk by splitting the particles into thousands of smaller and potentially more dangerous nanoplastics…

  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
Instagram Facebook Twitter

© 2010 – 2024 CoastalCare.org