Being chemically inert and morphologically similar (<5 mm in size) to the natural prey of copepods, microplastics (MPs) affect them through entanglement, ingestion, and interference with their natural prey selection. The effects of external factors, such as MP, can be observed in the form of alterations in the functional and numerical responses of copepods. Functional response is explained as the relationship between the intake rate of a consumer and the amount of food available in a particular ecotope. Considered three types of functional response: (i) with increasing food density, when intake rate increases linearly until asymptote, called Type-I functional response; (ii) when the proportion of prey ingested by the consumer decreases mono...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
This is the final version. Available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.Microplastics (1 μm–5 ...
Microplastic is ubiquitously and persistently present in the marine environment, but knowledge of it...
Multi-day experiments were carried out with two Marmara Sea calanoid copepod species: Acartia clausi...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ...
Copepods, the most abundant zooplankton, are known to consume microplastics. My study aims to see w...
The underlying mechanisms that influence microplastic ingestion in marine zooplankton remain poorly u...
Microscopic plastic debris, termed “microplastics”, are of increasing environmental concern. Recent ...
Increasing marine microplastic pollution has detrimentally impacted organismal physiology and ecosys...
Microplastics are a pervasive pollutant of environmental concern. Their small size means they are bi...
Dataset: Dinoflagellate Functional Response during Microplastic FeedingData were collected examining...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
Microplastics may affect the physiology, behaviour and populations of aquatic and terrestrial fauna ...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
This is the final version. Available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.Microplastics (1 μm–5 ...
Microplastic is ubiquitously and persistently present in the marine environment, but knowledge of it...
Multi-day experiments were carried out with two Marmara Sea calanoid copepod species: Acartia clausi...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ...
Copepods, the most abundant zooplankton, are known to consume microplastics. My study aims to see w...
The underlying mechanisms that influence microplastic ingestion in marine zooplankton remain poorly u...
Microscopic plastic debris, termed “microplastics”, are of increasing environmental concern. Recent ...
Increasing marine microplastic pollution has detrimentally impacted organismal physiology and ecosys...
Microplastics are a pervasive pollutant of environmental concern. Their small size means they are bi...
Dataset: Dinoflagellate Functional Response during Microplastic FeedingData were collected examining...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
Microplastics may affect the physiology, behaviour and populations of aquatic and terrestrial fauna ...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
Microplastic debris is a pervasive environmental contaminant that has the potential to impact the he...
This is the final version. Available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.Microplastics (1 μm–5 ...
Microplastic is ubiquitously and persistently present in the marine environment, but knowledge of it...