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. 2015 May 5;112(18):5547-9.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.1504135112.

News feature: Microplastics present pollution puzzle

News feature: Microplastics present pollution puzzle

Alla Katsnelson. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. .

Erratum in

No abstract available

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Figures

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Polyethylene beads such as these, extracted from a cosmetic product and shown in an electron micrograph, tend to pass through sewage treatment plants and end up in natural waters. Image courtesy of Adil Bakir and Richard Thompson (Plymouth University, United Kingdom).
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Microplastic particles (yellow) can cross from the digestive system into the blood cells (green) of mussels. Image courtesy of Mark Browne (University of New South Wales, Australia).
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A surface trawl in the middle of the South Atlantic Gyre picks up plankton, shells, and bits of plastic. Image courtesy of Stiv Wilson (The Story of Stuff Project).

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References

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