Ana Maria Mihalcea, MD, PhD - Oct 01, 2022 ∙ Paid ∙ Source
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I am reposting this article posted by the Society of Plastics Engineers. Once you read it, imagine metal nanoparticles that get injected into the body like we see from the C19 injections, that we inhale via toxic aerosolized geoengineering, that is in our food chain and water supply. Imagine how this is changing natural biology everywhere…. and slowly but surely destroying it.
Study Shows How Microplastics Can Easily Climb The Food Chain
It begins with plants sucking synthetic contaminants up from the soil. Then insects munching on those greens get their fill of nanoplastics, followed by anything that eats them.
Just as with heavy metals in the ocean , it turns out nanoplastics – plastic particles less than one micrometer in size – can also move up the food chain. These particles are primarily the result of bigger plastic pieces being weathered down by natural processes – sometimes by the animals ingesting them .
Researchers from Europe, led by biologist Fazel Monikh from the University of Eastern Finland, demonstrated this process in a laboratory by feeding tiny 250 nm particles of polystyrene and polyvinyl chloride to lettuce ( Lactuca sativa ).
After 14 days, researchers fed that lettuce to black soldier fly larvae ( Hermetia illucens ), then gave those larvae to hungry roach fish ( Rutilus rutilus ) after another 5 days. Once the fish fed on the insects for 5 days, the team dissected and imaged the tissues from each food chain ( trophic ) level.
Because these particles are hard to detect and can be altered during their physiological journeys, researchers encased the rare element gadolinium within the tiny plastics to more easily track them. The team used a scanning electron microscope (SEM) to make sure the plastic completely covered the metal to reduce its biological influence.
The good news is that biomagnification did not appear to occur with these types of nanoplastics in the species studied. Biomagnification is when the chemicals taken up at the lower trophic levels become more concentrated as they pass up the food chain; this is a common problem caused by pollutants like mercury and polychlorinated biphenyls .
But the images revealed nanoplastics in the gills, liver, and intestines of the fish, in the mouth and guts of the insects, and accumulated in the leaves of the lettuce.
Moreover, the two plastics behaved differently as they journeyed through the food chain. The lettuce took up slightly less polystyrene, so less of this plastic flavor was passed on compared to the polyvinyl chloride.
Properties like the size, shape, and surface chemistry of the particles could all influence the different impacts they have on life, the researchers explain. For instance, some earthworms might be more likely to break down polyethylene in the soil before it gets taken up by a plant.
"Our results show that lettuce can take up nanoplastics from the soil and transfer them into the food chain," says Monikh. "This indicates that the presence of tiny plastic particles in soil could be associated with a potential health risk to herbivores and humans if these findings are found to be generalizable to other plants and crops and to field settings."
Microplastics, including the smaller nanoplastics, are now ubiquitous in every environment, from the deepest ocean trenches , the highest mountains , and the remote isolation of Antarctica . They're in the food we eat , the water we drink , and the air we breathe .
Microplastics are passing through our bodies every day, but researchers say there's no need for panic , as there are clearly no short-term, immediate impacts on us; it's the long-term exposure and high concentration levels that remain a concern.
The particular concern about these tiny particles is that they're small enough to pass through many more physiological barriers, unlike their larger particles of origin. Some have already been shown to cause potential toxicity in plants , invertebrates , and vertebrates .
Monikh and colleagues also demonstrate how these plastics can attract a protein cover on their surface as they pass through various life forms. How this changes their impact is completely unknown.
"Further research into the topic is still urgently needed," Monikh concludes .
Here is the link to Nano Today
Quantifying the trophic transfer of sub-micron plastics in an assembled food chain
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Dr. Jeffrey Horelick - Oct 1, 2022
Dr. Jeffrey Horelick
Hello my friend another great article I posted on TruthSocial and look forward to talking to you soon. Take care, 🌻
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HWG - Oct 1, 2022
I'm thinking about those gigantic floating islands of plastics now found in our once pristine oceans, and how ubiquitous use and careless disposal of plastics in packaging of all kinds are now deeply rooted habits of consumers world wide. This has been encouraged by industry over more costly but cleaner for the for the environment alternatives, because profit has become Everything in our corporatized world.
We as a current Earth Human race have forgotten that our beautiful Earth is a living Being. With the exception of a few indigenous groups we have forgotten that there is an exchange required for the gift of living here. As inhabitants here we have forgotten that we are meant to be Her gardeners, and that it is our sacred duty to be the protectors of our beautiful Earth. Where are the Climate Change Fanatics who shout from the rooftops as they carelessly toss their plastic water bottles and beverage cans into the trash bin, then pile them onto great barges and drop them into the sea?
Thankfully we can chelate out heavy metals out of our bodies with EDTA and High dose Vitamin C infusions. Is there a known way to remove concentrations microplastics from our bodies?
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