it affects everything
No. For one thing, the ocean currents do not match up with the movements of plates. Second, the force behind those currents is not enough to drive plate movements.
A animal could eat the waste and think it's food and the animal could die.
Two abiotic factors of the ocean that are conditions of the environment are temperature and salinity. These factors can affect the distribution of marine species and influence ocean currents and circulation patterns.
If convection currents didn't form in the surface zone, the water temperature would not distribute evenly throughout the water column. This could lead to a stratification of temperature with warmer water being retained near the surface and cooler water remaining deeper. Over time, this could affect nutrient distribution, marine life behavior, and potentially lead to a less dynamic ecosystem.
Louis Pasteur discovered that microscopic animals could live in food
Some of them are, however, there are many microscopic organisms that are not harmful, some of which you could not survive without.
some microscopic things could be molecules, atoms,and anything that you can see under a microscope
Trash affects our environment in many different ways for e.g.Air PollutionSea Pollution- which then leads to affecting the marine animals
Waves affect certain marine organisms. Only the ones near the surface, they could also be affected by the tides (High tide, low tide)
Ocean currents. This could also apply to wind currents.
There are a number of processes that could fit this description including mud / debris flows and solifluction (both types of "mass wasting"). In pelagic / benthic (marine) settings turbidity currents would also fit this description. Please see the related links.
Opposite of microscope could possibly be macroscope. Prof. Jeelani