Effects of Environmental Pollution on Aquatic Animal Diversity
Keywords:
aquatic biodiversity, environmental pollution, heavy metals, eutrophication, ecotoxicology, species richness, biomonitoring, freshwater ecosystemsAbstract
Aquatic ecosystems serve as some of the most biologically diverse and ecologically significant habitats on Earth, yet they are disproportionately vulnerable to the consequences of environmental pollution. The accelerating pace of industrialization, agricultural intensification, and urban development since the mid-twentieth century has led to the progressive degradation of freshwater and marine environments through the discharge of heavy metals, synthetic organic compounds, nutrient overloads, petroleum hydrocarbons, and emerging contaminants such as microplastics. The paper synthesizes findings across ten global study sites, presenting quantitative evidence of species richness decline, community structure disruption, physiological impairment, and food web destabilization. Results demonstrate that species richness declined between 18.7% and 62.3% across the reviewed sites, with petroleum hydrocarbon and heavy metal contamination producing the most severe outcomes. Methodologically, this study employed a systematic literature review approach supplemented by comparative meta-analysis of field surveys, ecotoxicological assays, and biomonitoring data. The paper concludes with a discussion of conservation and remediation implications, policy recommendations, and directions for future research.
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