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Christophe Lambert

Researcher at IFREMER

Publications -  118
Citations -  8663

Christophe Lambert is an academic researcher from IFREMER. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oyster & Crassostrea. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 102 publications receiving 6605 citations. Previous affiliations of Christophe Lambert include European University of Brittany & University of Western Brittany.

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Oyster reproduction is affected by exposure to polystyrene microplastics

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that micro-PS cause feeding modifications and reproductive disruption in oysters, with significant impacts on offspring, providing ground-breaking data on microplastic impacts in an invertebrate model, helping to predict ecological impact in marine ecosystems.
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Microplastics in seafood: Benchmark protocol for their extraction and characterization

TL;DR: The protocol using a KOH 10% solution and incubation at 60 °C during a 24 h period led to an efficient digestion of biological tissues with no significant degradation on all tested polymers, except for cellulose acetate.
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Exposure of marine mussels Mytilus spp. to polystyrene microplastics: Toxicity and influence on fluoranthene bioaccumulation.

TL;DR: Results suggest that under the experimental conditions of this study micro-PS led to direct toxic effects at tissue, cellular and molecular levels, and modulated fluoranthene kinetics and toxicity in marine mussels.
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Interactions between microplastics and phytoplankton aggregates: Impact on their respective fates

TL;DR: The results clearly show that marine aggregates can be an efficient sink for microplastics by influencing their vertical distribution in the water column, and opens new questions regarding the impact of plastics on sedimentation fluxes in oceans.
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Influence of environmental and anthropogenic factors on the composition, concentration and spatial distribution of microplastics: A case study of the Bay of Brest (Brittany, France).

TL;DR: The presence of buoyant microplastics (PE, PP and PS) in sediment suggests the existence of physical and/or biological processes leading to vertical transfer of lightweight microplastic in the Bay of Brest, and it is suggested that the observed spatial MP distribution is related to proximity to urbanized areas and to hydrodynamics in the bay.