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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. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Microplastics in lakes: Distribution patterns and influencing factors

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 68 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jianchao Liu, Yifan Fan, Sijia Liang, Yifan Fan, Sijia Liang, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Jianchao Liu, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Ming Kong Sijia Liang, Sijia Liang, Yifan Fan, Jianchao Liu, Sijia Liang, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Sijia Liang, Meijun Bao, Meijun Bao, Yifan Fan, Jianchao Liu, Sijia Liang, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Ming Kong Jianchao Liu, Jianchao Liu, Ming Kong Jianchao Liu, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Ming Kong

Summary

This review analyzed 84 studies across 64 lakes worldwide to understand where microplastics tend to concentrate in freshwater systems. Microplastic levels were highest near areas of heavy human activity and water inflows, and concentrations in lake sediments have been increasing over time, which matters because lakes are important sources of drinking water.

Study Type Environmental

As a kind of new pollutants, microplastics (MPs) have aroused public concern due to their widespread presence and potential ecological risks. Lakes, as crucial freshwater ecosystems and important water resources, are particularly vulnerable to MPs pollution. While MPs are known to be unevenly distributed within lakes, their distribution patterns and influencing factors have not been thoroughly understood. This review analyzes 84 field studies across 64 lakes worldwide to elucidate MPs distribution patterns and their driving mechanisms. Analysis reveals that MPs abundance is typically highest near areas of intense human activity and major water inflows, though hydrodynamics and wind conditions also influence spatial patterns. MPs characteristics (shape, size, color, polymer type) show distinct distribution patterns influenced by source types, transport mechanisms, and degradation processes. While surface water MPs concentrations vary seasonally due to precipitation, wind, and human activities, sediment cores indicate increasing MPs abundance in recent deposits. Integration of water and sediment sampling reveals that MPs characteristics affect their vertical distribution, with denser particles prone to sedimentation. This review identifies key knowledge gaps, including limited data on vertical distributions and temporal variations, and emphasizes the need for standardized methods and quantitative analysis of driving factors. These reviewed findings provide a foundation for understanding MPs fate in lake ecosystems and improving risk assessment capabilities, offering valuable insights for future surveys on MPs.

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