Gizmodo

It seems that nobody—and no body part—is safe from microplastics. In a recent study, researchers found traces of plastic in the testicles of both dogs and humans. The potential health impacts of this discovery are not yet clear, but the team suggests it may help explain why men’s sperm counts have declined over time.

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Tech Insider
Tourists fill plastic bottles with water from a public fountain at the Sforzesco Castle, in Milan, Italy.
Scientists discovered hundreds of thousands of mico- and nanoplastics inside popular water bottle brands.
Tech Insider
Pepsi bottles are displayed for sale in a Rite-Aid in Los Angeles
PepsiCo is the single largest contributor to plastic waste contaminating the Buffalo River, a lawsuit alleges.
Gizmodo : Environment

New research this week is the latest to show that microplastics have polluted just about everywhere on Earth. Scientists discovered plastic particles in cloud samples collected from atop a mountain in Eastern China.

Gizmodo : Environment

Nowhere is safe from microplastics. Tiny plastic pieces are in waterways, in our bodies, and now researchers have found microplastics in clouds on top of Mount Fuji and Mount Oyama.

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Tech Insider : Environment
A side by side photo of a man throwing clothes into his washer with an incredulous look on his face and an up close photo of microplastics on someones hand.
The way you're laundering your clothes may be adding more microplastics into the environment.