Institute of Marine Sciences (ISMAR), National Council of Researches (CNR), Largo Fiera della Pesca, 1 60125 Ancona, Italy
Received date: January 28, 2014; Accepted date: January 29, 2013; Published date: January 31, 2014
Citation: Gomiero A (2014) The Contribution of OMICS Publishing Group to the Topic of Marine Litter and Micro Plastic Studies. J Marine Sci Res Dev 4:e127. doi:10.4172/2155-9910.1000e127
Copyright: © 2014 Gomiero A. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Visit for more related articles at Journal of Marine Science: Research & Development
The environmental problem of marine litter is gaining even more scientific attention as more data are becoming available on its occurrence, abundance and geographical distribution. Due to its versatile chemical structure, plastic is extensively exploited in several industrial, commercial and medical applications. Approximately 50 percent of total production is made up of goods disposed of within one year of purchase and breaking down in the environment at an uncontrollable rate. Macroplastic litter (>5 mm, NOAA) often undergoes to mechanical, chemical and photo-degradation reaching microscopic size and thus harming marine organisms as it can be easily ingested or filter-fed. Given the continual fragmentation of plastic items, particle concentrations are likely to increase with decreasing size. This poses the attention on the emerging toxicological implications of even higher environmental concentrations of even smaller “microplastic” compounds. Too little is known about the environmental occurrence, food web bioaccumulation and final fate of such diverse classes of emerging contaminants. Therefore, major efforts are needed to understand microplastic biotransformation processes, route of exposure, toxicological implications like i.e., that related to the “trojan horse” effect by which microplastics can help transfer potentially dangerous chemicals to marine organisms.
On this context, the OMICS Publishing Group supports this drive to knowledge by prompt publication and high-rise visibility of research. In contrast to the traditional model where access to content can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars, its access to publications is free. Together with the availability and distribution via the Internet, the benefits of publishing with the OMICS Group are closely related to the possibility of adding links to the content, giving authors a chance to increase the number of times their paper is cited. The impact of Open Access on citation rate has been examined for many years and a thorough analysis is beginning to confirm that this model increases citation. Under the review of at least two members of the scientific community both the scientific robustness of presented results and the publication speed is guaranteed.
Thanks to the large number of managed journals the OMICS Publishing Group reach over 2.5 millions of readers globally, making sure high author’s work visibility and thus supporting audience scientific debate. The topic of marine microplastic litter may be well developed in the area of Marine Science – Research and Development of Open Access Scientific Reports.
--Make the best use of Scientific Research and information from our 700 + peer reviewed, Open Access Journals