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posted by janrinok on Wednesday April 27 2022, @02:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the we've-got-to-get-to-the-sea dept.

Pathogens can hitch a ride on plastic to reach the sea:

Microplastics are a pathway for pathogens on land to reach the ocean, with likely consequences for human and wildlife health, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.

[...] The pathogens studied—Toxoplasma gondii, Cryptosporidium (Crypto) and Giardia—can infect both humans and animals. They are recognized by the World Health Organization as underestimated causes of illness from shellfish consumption and are found throughout the ocean.

"It's easy for people to dismiss plastic problems as something that doesn't matter for them, like, 'I'm not a turtle in the ocean; I won't choke on this thing,'" said corresponding author Karen Shapiro, an infectious disease expert and associate professor in the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. "But once you start talking about disease and health, there's more power to implement change. Microplastics can actually move germs around, and these germs end up in our water and our food."

[...] T. gondii, a parasite found only in cat poop, has infected many ocean species with the disease toxoplasmosis. UC Davis and its partners have a long history of research connecting the parasite to sea otter deaths. It's also killed critically endangered wildlife, including Hector's dolphins and Hawaiian monk seals. In people, toxoplasmosis can cause life-long illnesses, as well as developmental and reproductive disorders.

Crypto and giardia cause gastrointestinal disease and can be deadly in young children and people who are immunocompromised.

"This is very much a problem that affects both humans and animals," said first author Emma Zhang, a fourth-year veterinary student with the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. "It highlights the importance of a One Health approach that requires collaboration across human, wildlife and environmental disciplines. We all depend on the ocean environment."

More information: Association of zoonotic protozoan parasites with microplastics in seawater and implications for human and wildlife health, Scientific Reports (2022).
Journal information:Scientific Reports Provided by UC Davis.
Citation : Pathogens can hitch a ride on plastic to reach the sea (2022, April 26) from https://phys.org/news/2022-04-pathogens-hitch-plastic-sea.html


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  • (Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27 2022, @04:54PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27 2022, @04:54PM (#1240080)

    the Lithium Wars of the 22nd century were started over the scarcity of the element used in battery technology to supply the energy needs of a post carbon society. Australia and the Southern Cone countries of South America became puppet states of the major powers for the reserves of the precious metal.

    This could have been avoided if instead of depleting the world's oceans for food, we had stuck to land-based proteins.

    Post industrialism had created mass depression across civilizations. Antidepressants flushed into our sewers would show up in waterways where the lithium could be directly extracted from fish.

    But instead they ate the fish and died from the pathogens present in microplastics.

    Eat more chicken. Sure, the hormones in the chicken breast will cause your own man-boobs to enlarge but in a progressive society where no one cares if you're non-binary...

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