All planned tasks were excecuated, including WP1 on plastic fluxes in seaweed beds, WP2 on algal physiological responses, and WP3 on ecosystem-function pilots by field surveys, controlled-flume trials. An enzymatic + Fenton digestion protocol applied to 50 macroalgae samples, coupled with 1 km-resolution 30-day Lagrangian particle tracking, showed that 34 ± 8 % of canopy-retained plastics are exported pelagically while 51 ± 10 % settle in local sediments. Leachate assays on Ceramium tenuicorne exposed to polyethylene and TDCPP (7 d) revealed hormetic growth yet chlorophyll suppression, with ORAC emerging as a sensitive biomarker. A fully factorial flume experiment (microplastics × PAHs × turbulence) identified PAHs as the main driver of −18 % ΦPSII, with microplastic-induced resuspension amplifying oxidative stress (+41 % ORAC). Baseline C:N:P stoichiometry, extracellular-enzyme activity and litter decomposition data from beach wrack at four sites seeded five grant proposals for post-fellowship scaling. Key outcomes include the first export/burial coefficients for algal-associated plastics, a validated multi-endpoint macrophyte toxicity battery (growth + chlorophyll + ORAC), and a partial least-squares structural-equation (PLS-SEM) toolkit (image 1) for disentangling direct chemical from indirect physical stressors. Numeric flux factors, SOPs and R scripts have been transferred and under discussion within HELCOM working groups for integration into Descriptor 10 metrics and the Global Marine-Litter Assessment. Dissemination includes one peer-reviewed article, two under review, a CRC-Press chapter, presentations at SETAC-Europe, Baltic Sea Day and Stockholm Research Day, media outreach (Sveriges Radio), European Researchers’ Night activities, and supervision of one post-doc, one MSc and seven Erasmus students plus a 1.5-month scientific exchange; collectively delivering protocols, data and early-warning biomarkers used by regulators, academics and industry.