0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Plastic pollution in brackish waters: Macroalgae as collectors of plastic debris

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Teresa Bottari Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Monique Mancuso, Francesca Fabrizi, Francesca Fabrizi, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Monique Mancuso, Francesca Fabrizi, Francesca Fabrizi, Mikołaj Mazurkiewicz, C. Branca, Bilal Mghili, Teresa Bottari Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Bilal Mghili, Monique Mancuso, Damiano Spagnuolo, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Francesca Fabrizi, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Valeria Conti Nibali, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Francesca Fabrizi, Teresa Bottari Valeria Conti Nibali, Valeria Conti Nibali, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Giovanna D’Angelo, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Bilal Mghili, C. Branca, C. Branca, Mikołaj Mazurkiewicz, Mikołaj Mazurkiewicz, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Mikołaj Mazurkiewicz, C. Branca, Mikołaj Mazurkiewicz, Bilal Mghili, Bilal Mghili, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Giovanna D’Angelo, Bilal Mghili, Monique Mancuso, C. Branca, Monique Mancuso, C. Branca, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Francesca Fabrizi, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Giovanna D’Angelo, Francesca Fabrizi, C. Branca, Elisa Punzo, Mikołaj Mazurkiewicz, Teresa Bottari Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Giovanna D’Angelo, Giovanna D’Angelo, Giovanna D’Angelo, Teresa Bottari Valeria Conti Nibali, Teresa Bottari Giuseppa Genovese, Giovanna D’Angelo, Giovanna D’Angelo, Giovanna D’Angelo, Giovanna D’Angelo, Monique Mancuso, Giovanna D’Angelo, Teresa Bottari Bilal Mghili, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Monique Mancuso, Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari Teresa Bottari

Summary

Researchers investigated how two bloom-forming macroalgae (Chaetomorpha aerea and Hypnea cornuta) in a Sicilian coastal lagoon trap plastic debris ranging from macroplastics to microplastics, finding both species act as natural collectors with different capture efficiencies.

Study Type Environmental

Transitional waters, like the Capo Peloro lagoon, are ecologically and commercially valuable but particularly vulnerable to plastic pollution. This study investigates, for the first time, how two bloom-forming macroalgae, Chaetomorpha aerea and Hypnea cornuta, trap plastic debris in Ganzirri lake (Capo Peloro lagoon). Both species acted as natural traps for plastics, ranging from macroplastics (> 25 mm) to microplastics (< 5 mm). C. aerea captured more macroplastic (4.91 items/kg) than H. cornuta (2.19 items/kg). The average abundance of microplastics on C. aerea (0.35 items/g) and H. cornuta (0.51 items/g) was more than 100 times higher than surrounding waters (0.003 items/ml). FTIR and Raman analysis identified 16 synthetic polymers, 3 elastomers, and 2 anthropogenic microfibers, revealing a great polymer diversity. A wider spectrum of anthropogenic microparticles was isolated from macroalgae, with 11 different materials identified in C. aerea and 14 in H. cornuta, compared to 7 found in the water. Wastewater from domestic laundry, dumping activities, mollusc farming, and fisheries were identified as the main sources of plastics. While algae removal may help reduce plastic pollution, it must be managed sustainably to prevent biodiversity loss or secondary pollution. The results highlight the importance of integrat macroalgae management with broader conservation strategies to protect these vulnerable ecosystems.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper