Nanoplastics in the Environment: Sources, Fate, Toxicity, Challenges and Mitigation Strategies

Mohit Deswal

Department of Zoology, Maharshi Dayanand University, Rohtak, Haryana – 124001, India.

Nidhi Garg *

Department of Zoology, Shivaji College, University of Delhi, Raja Garden, New Delhi- 110027, India.

Abhiram S Variar

Department of Zoology, Shivaji College, University of Delhi, Raja Garden, New Delhi- 110027, India.

Sunita Gupta

Department of Zoology, Shivaji College, University of Delhi, Raja Garden, New Delhi- 110027, India.

Rakesh Roshan

Department of Zoology, Shivaji College, University of Delhi, Raja Garden, New Delhi- 110027, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Plastic has transformed the industry and everyday life yet it has also formed an ever-present environmental menace. UV radiation, mechanical abrasion, and oxidation degradation lead to the formation of microplastics and nanoplastics (<1000 nm), which pollute the water, soil, and air. Nanoplastics escalate risk because of their minuscule dimensions, high surface energy, capacity to penetrate biological barriers, and engagement with cellular structures. They can be readily taken up by the cells and bioaccumulated within trophic levels. Nanoplastics cause oxidative stress, inflammation, damage to DNA, and endocrine disruption in living organisms, and their presence in the blood, lungs and placenta of human beings portend to long-term systemic consequences. Despite increased sensitivity of the methods of analysis with the help of FTIR, Raman spectroscopy, and pyrolysis-GC-MS, the absence of standard procedures and reference samples remains a limiting factor reproducibility. The issue of weak regulation, inconsistency in methods and lack of chronic-exposure data are reasons why globally harmonised detection frameworks and human biomonitoring systems are required. Nanoplastics can therefore be seen as a negating contaminant that needs integrated measures in order to secure the entire environment and human health risks.

Keywords: Nanoplastics, synthetic polymers, biomagnification, trophic transfer, ecotoxicity


How to Cite

Deswal, Mohit, Nidhi Garg, Abhiram S Variar, Sunita Gupta, and Rakesh Roshan. 2025. “Nanoplastics in the Environment: Sources, Fate, Toxicity, Challenges and Mitigation Strategies”. Asian Journal of Environment & Ecology 24 (11):111-28. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajee/2025/v24i11820.

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