Michael S. Bank2026-03-052026-03-052022978-3-319-69623-959https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78627-4https://link.springer.com/openurl?genre=book&isbn=978-3-030-78627-4http://bibliovirtual.umar.mx:4000/handle/123456789/1910Libro electrónicoThis open access book examines global plastic pollution, an issue that has become a critical societal challenge with implications for environmental and public health. This volume provides a comprehensive, holistic analysis on the plastic cycle and its subsequent effects on biota, food security, and human exposure. Importantly, global environmental change and its associated, systems-level processes, including atmospheric deposition, ecosystem complexity, UV exposure, wind patterns, water stratification, ocean circulation, etc., are all important direct and indirect factors governing the fate, transport and biotic and abiotic processing of plastic particles across ecosystem types. Furthermore, the distribution of plastic in the ocean is not independent of terrestrial ecosystem dynamics, since much of the plastic in marine ecosystems originates from land and should therefore be evaluated in the context of the larger plastic cycle.en-USMicroplastic in the Environment: Pattern and ProcessBook