(Press-News.org) A study conducted by researchers affiliated with the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil concluded that particles of glitter can hinder the growth of organisms at the base of aquatic ecosystems, such as cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), which play a key role in the biogeochemical cycles of water and soil, as well as being eaten by other organisms. An article on the study is published in the journal Aquatic Toxicology.
Ubiquitous in makeup, nail polish, holiday decorations, greeting cards, Carnival costumes and many other places, glitter sticks to skin and clothes and requires a lot of effort to remove. It is made up of microplastics, tiny particles under 5 mm in size, typically polyethylene terephthalate (PET) or polyvinyl chloride (PVC), coated with aluminum to create a reflective surface.
Microplastics are too small to be filtered out by wastewater treatment plants and end up flowing from drains in shower stalls or sinks to rivers, beaches and oceans. More than 8 million metric tons of glitter are estimated to have been discharged into the ocean in recent years, according to recent scientific studies.
Glitter is not biodegradable and harms aquatic organisms along with the entire surrounding ecosystem via ingestion, contact with toxic ingredients, and injury caused by its sharp edges. In addition, the shape, size and physicochemical properties of the microparticles in glitter hinder accurate measurement of water contamination levels.
The study was conducted at the Center for Nuclear Energy in Agriculture (CENA-USP) with FAPESP’s support (projects 16/14227-5 and 18/24049-2).
The researchers analyzed the effects of five concentrations of glitter particles on two bloom-forming cyanobacteria strains, Microcystis aeruginosa CENA508 (unicellular) and Nodularia spumigena CENA596 (filamentous). Both are part of a collection of almost 800 strains assembled in Brazil by the Cyanos group. The scientists measured their cellular growth rates every three days for 21 days by spectrophotometry, estimating the intensity of light spectra absorbed and transmitted by each sample based on the number of photons emitted.
“We found that increasing the amount of glitter raised the biovolume of the cyanobacterial cells and boosted stress to levels that even impaired photosynthesis. The toxicity of glitter for microorganisms has hardly been studied at all. Whatever affects cyanobacteria will indirectly affect other organisms in the same environment,” said Mauricio Junior Machado, first author of the article and a researcher in CENA-USP’s Cellular and Molecular Biology Laboratory.
The results suggest that environmental levels of glitter similar to the highest level tested – 350 milligrams per liter of water (mg/L) – can negatively influence susceptible organisms in aquatic ecosystems. The most evident effect was seen in M. aeruginosa, whose growth rate was best at 50 mg/L and worst at 200 mg/L. In the case of N. spumigena, the range was 100-137 mg/L, above which cell density was irrecoverably damaged. The difference in growth rates occurred only on the twenty-first day of the experiment.
Chlorophyll and carotenoids did not vary significantly, but in absolute terms, both strains displayed a fall in carotenoids when exposed to glitter at 200 mg/L and 350 mg/L, and chlorophyll fluorescence varied in N. spumigena when exposed to glitter at 350 mg/L.
Consumer education
The authors hope the study will help educate consumers and policymakers about the importance of avoiding pollution by microplastics. “Glitter is sold for use in festivities, where people spare little thought for the environmental problems it causes,” noted Marli de Fátima Fiore, last author of the article. “However, it’s necessary to bear in mind that microplastics contaminate and damage marine and freshwater ecosystems, which are extremely important to our lives, and to think about campaigns to avoid microplastic pollution as much as possible.”
The researchers now plan to perform the same tests on other cyanobacterial strains, as well as analyze so-called biodegradable glitter to find out whether it causes problems such as metallic components and pigments harming organisms.
END
Glitter impairs growth of organisms with key roles in aquatic ecosystems, study shows
Researchers at the University of São Paulo investigated the effects of five concentrations of glitter on two strains of cyanobacteria. Use of the material in makeup, party costumes and decorations should be reconsidered, they argue.
2023-08-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Mount Sinai study identifies most effective and safest outpatient labor induction methods, potentially reducing hospital stays and increasing hospital efficiency in use of resources
2023-08-22
Paper Title: Outpatient cervical ripening and labor induction with low-dose vaginal misoprostol reduces the interval to delivery: A systematic review and network meta-analysis
Journal: American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, July 2023
Authors: Joanne L. Stone, MD, MSHCDL, Professor and System Chair of the Raquel and Jaime Gilinski Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Science at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; Rachel Meislin, MD, Maternal-Fetal Medicine Fellow at Mount Sinai Hospital; and other coauthors.
Bottom Line: While prior research and analysis have evaluated methods of outpatient labor ...
NIH awards The Texas Heart Institute $1.14 million to develop a novel, first-in-class drug for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease
2023-08-22
HOUSTON (Aug. 22, 2023) — The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) recently awarded The Texas Heart Institute® (THI) a two-year, $1.14 million grant to develop a novel, first-in-class drug to treat cardiovascular disease (CVD) as a significant improvement to current treatment regimens — specifically for adverse events arising from atherosclerosis.
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimating that one person dies from CVD every 33 seconds in the United States, accounting for one in every five deaths in 2021.
CVD leads to heart ...
UT Health San Antonio, 7 collaborators garner $46 million from NIH to move discoveries into practice
2023-08-22
SAN ANTONIO (Aug. 22, 2023) — The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (also called UT Health San Antonio) and seven regional collaborators will leverage $46 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) over the next five to seven years to translate scientific discoveries into therapeutic benefits for human health and well-being.
A key focus will be reducing health disparities among Mexican Americans, active military personnel and veterans.
William L. Henrich, ...
Automate or informate? Firms must invest in specific types of IT to improve working capital management
2023-08-22
The management of working capital — or a firm’s current assets minus its current liabilities — aids organizations in making efficient use of their existing assets and maximizing cash flow.
The relationship between efficient working capital management and firm performance can be complex due to globally dispersed supply chains, number of suppliers and product variety, and technological uncertainty, among other factors.
New research from the University of Notre Dame shows that information technology represents a critical investment that ...
Stealth BioTherapeutics will spotlight latest advancements in mitochondrial medicine at Targeting Mitochondria 2023, Berlin
2023-08-22
BERLIN, Germany – Stealth BioTherapeutics, a front-runner in the world of mitochondrial medicine, is set to unveil its latest breakthroughs at the much-anticipated Targeting Mitochondria 2023 conference in Berlin this October.
Dr. David A. Brown, Vice President of Mitochondrial Research at Stealth BioTherapeutics, is slated to give an enlightening talk titled, “Translational insights from targeting mitochondria in rare diseases.” His presentation promises to provide insights into Stealth’s progress in clinical programs, with updates on their advancements in addressing rare mitochondrial diseases across several Phase 2/3 clinical trials. ...
MIT engineers use kirigami to make ultrastrong, lightweight structures
2023-08-22
Cellular solids are materials composed of many cells that have been packed together, such as a honeycomb. The shape of those cells largely determines the material’s mechanical properties, including its stiffness or strength. Bones, for instance, are filled with a natural material that enables them to be lightweight, but stiff and strong.
Inspired by bones and other cellular solids found in nature, humans have used the same concept ...
$1.7 million research project to examine how public schools identify learning disabilities
2023-08-22
A University of Houston researcher is launching a new study to examine how elementary schools across Texas and Florida identify specific learning disabilities in students, with the goal of improving processes so children with significant academic difficulties can succeed.
Jeremy Miciak, research associate professor of psychology at the University of Houston’s Texas Institute for Measurement, Evaluation, and Statistics, was awarded a $1.7 million grant from the National Center for Special Education Research at the Institute of Education Sciences, the research arm ...
Catheter ablation in very old patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation
2023-08-22
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to have demonstrated the preventive effect of AF ablation on long-term AF-related cardiovascular events in very old patients with NVAF.”
BUFFALO, NY- August 22, 2023 – A new research paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 15, Issue 15, entitled, “Cardiovascular events and death after catheter ablation in very old patients with nonvalvular ...
Researchers decode new antibiotic
2023-08-22
More and more bacterial pathogens are developing resistance. There is an increasing risk that common drugs will no longer be effective against infectious diseases. That is why scientists around the world are searching for new effective substances. Researchers from the University of Bonn, the German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Utrecht University (Netherlands), Northeastern University in Boston (USA) and the company NovoBiotic Pharmaceuticals in Cambridge (USA) now have discovered and deciphered the mode of action of a new antibiotic. Clovibactin is derived from ...
Wistar researchers discover potential target for gastric cancers associated with Epstein-Barr virus
2023-08-22
PHILADELPHIA—(August 22, 2023)—Now, scientists at The Wistar Institute have discovered a potential target for gastric cancers associated with Epstein-Barr Virus; study results were published in the journal mBio. In the paper, Wistar’s Tempera lab investigates the epigenetic characteristics of gastric cancer associated with the Epstein-Barr Virus: EBVaGC. In evaluating EBVaGC’s epigenetics — the series of biological signals associated with the genome that determines whether a given gene is expressed — the Tempera lab ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
'Unprecedented' wildfires in tropical peatlands during 20th century
University of Manchester scientists play key role in discovery of new heavy-proton particle at CERN
Blocking lipid production in healthy lung cells can reduce lung metastasis
Millions of protein complexes added to AlphaFold Database shed light on how proteins interact
Researchers show dinos hatched eggs less efficiently than modern birds
Neuroscientist from US-Mexico border dismantles science’s class problem from the inside
What flocking birds can teach AI
The scientist who warned that profit, not science, decides which drugs reach patients
A sea slug taught her how the brain works, and she never looked back
KIER cracks seawater electrolysis deposit problem with dual electrode system
Automated intervention shows significant increase in smoking cessation behavior
Top AI coding tools make mistakes one in four times
Hidden acid imbalance in kidney disease raises red flags
No evidence to suggest medicinal cannabis is effective for depression, anxiety or PTSD: research
The Lancet Global Health: Modelling suggests climate change could drive millions globally into physical inactivity by 2050 and be linked to an estimated half a million premature deaths
Fathers’ health crucial to improving pregnancy and child outcomes
Major step towards a first global system to track health before pregnancy
Climate action could prevent over 13 million premature deaths, but equity choices matter for global health
Bull sharks have ‘friends’
New research shows how to diagnose people with Alzheimer’s plus a hard-to-identify dementia type
Large craters offer clues to the origin of asteroid 16 Psyche
Researchers develop biochar-based photocatalyst that rapidly removes antibiotic pollutants from water
ACP supports AAP’s evidence‑based childhood vaccine schedule
Half of Native Hawaiian University of Hawaiʻi students experience period poverty, study reveals
American College of Cardiology to host New Orleans Community Health Fair
UMass Amherst research links early adult drinking to middle age cognitive decline
Early life stress linked to long-lasting digestive issues
A built-in warning system: How mosquitoes detect a common compound in plant-based mosquito repellent
Rice hosts first-of-its-kind workshop exploring how AI can accelerate discoveries in major neutrino experiment
Researchers combine flavor and nutritional value in Amazonian chocolate
[Press-News.org] Glitter impairs growth of organisms with key roles in aquatic ecosystems, study showsResearchers at the University of São Paulo investigated the effects of five concentrations of glitter on two strains of cyanobacteria. Use of the material in makeup, party costumes and decorations should be reconsidered, they argue.






