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Review Articles in 2025

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  • Heavy metal pollution shapes biodiversity in modern and past ecosystems, malformations and extinctions indicate toxicity, but their role as drivers or artifacts depends on bioavailability, according to a review of published literature on past mass extinction events and case studies.

    • Francesca Galasso
    • Anja B. Frank
    • William J. Foster
    Review ArticleOpen Access
  • Substantial environmental lead contamination continues today contributing to an annual global economic loss exceeding $3.4 trillion through contemporary childhood lead exposure, according to a review of lead sources, possible pathways into the environment, and human exposure in the 21st century.

    • Mengli Chen
    • Ludovica Gazze
    • Dominik Weiss
    Review ArticleOpen Access
  • Bioarchaeological isotope data that provide information on the migratory and feeding behaviors of ancient species and their interactions with humans can improve understanding of past ecological and climatic changes and improve predictions of environmental processes.

    • Margaux L. C. Depaermentier
    • Michael Kempf
    • Rhiannon E. Stevens
    Review ArticleOpen Access
  • Warming of +1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels is too high for the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, and even the current climate forcing of +1.2 °C is likely to lead to several meters of sea-level rise, meaning that only a return to +1 °C or lower will avoid extensive loss and damage to coastal populations, according to a synthesis of recent evidence.

    • Chris R. Stokes
    • Jonathan L. Bamber
    • Robert M. DeConto
    Review ArticleOpen Access
  • Climate change is altering bioaccumulation and biological effects of persistent organic pollutants in marine organisms, impacting toxicity, thermal regulation, and energy usage of exposed organisms with broad implications for ecological health.

    • Pamela D. Noyes
    • Daniele Miranda
    • Ricardo O. Barra
    Review ArticleOpen Access
  • Glacial weathering is a significant source of dissolved silicon to coastal waters, supporting diatom growth in polar ecosystems, according to a review of the stable and radioisotope measurements alongside biogeochemical modeling to understand subglacial silica mobilization and its cycling across the land-ocean continuum.

    • Katharine R. Hendry
    • Felipe Sales de Freitas
    • E. Malcolm S. Woodward
    Review ArticleOpen Access

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