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Microplastics' occurrence, distribution, and chemical toxicity in backwater sediments from Puducherry Coast, Southeast India

Kuwait Journal of Science 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Supriya Varshini Datchanamourthy, S. Natarajan, K. Srinivasamoorthy, Vinnarasi Francis, Babu Chinnaiyan, Ponnumani Govindhan, Ramesh Kamalapathy, Gopalakrishnan Viswalingam

Summary

Researchers measured microplastic concentrations in sediment cores from three sites along India's Puducherry coast, finding over 100 microplastic particles per square centimeter near the surface — with fibers and fragments made of PE, PP, and PET being most common — and high pollution risk scores at all sites.

Microplastics (MPs) are degraded particles (≤5.0 mm) that originate from macro-sized plastics that significantly impact ecosystems due to their extensive fragmentation. These lighter particles, impacted by various environmental factors, become negatively buoyant and sink into sediments. In the current study, the vertical distribution of MPs from three distinct locations along the Puducherry coastal region, Ariyankuppam River Bridge (S1), Thengaithittu Fishing Harbor (S2), and Chunnambar Beach (S3), was investigated. The three sediment core samples ranging from 0 to 10 cm depth were bifurcated into five sub-samples of 2 cm intervals. The MPs exhibited a gradually decreasing abundance with increasing depth. Higher MPs were observed within the top 0–2 cm sediment samples. The average MP concentration in S 1 , S 2 , and S 3 sediments was 138.5 MP cm −2 , 107.5 MP cm −2 , and 118.0 MP cm −2 , respectively. The most dominant MPs identified in sediments were fibers, fragments, and film with the major composition of polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and polyethylene terephthalate (PET). The MPs exhibited morphological changes, including irregular cracks, micro-brittles, pores, and erosion-like amorphous characteristics, potentially threatening marine organisms. Samples from S1 had a high pollution risk index (1,25,230) and polymeric hazards. All the sampling sites recorded a high contamination factor (CF ≥ 6) of sediments due to high levels of MPs. The present study emphasizes the need for deeper sediment sampling to gain valuable insights into MPs within global budgets. • The abundance of MPs in the sediment core samples decreased with increasing depth. • Fibers and fragments composed of PE and PP are the dominant types of MP. • MP surface morphology is altered by weathering, sorption, and sinking. • Ariyankuppam River face significant threats from high-risk polymeric hazards.

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