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 Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Microplastic Pollution in Urban Natural Lakes of Kathmandu Valley, Nepal

Environmental Quality Management 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kishor Kumar Maharjan, Angel Saru Magar, Ram Prasad Dhungel

Summary

Researchers studied microplastic pollution in the surface waters of two urban natural lakes in Nepal's Kathmandu Valley. Using stereomicroscopy and FTIR spectroscopy, they characterized the abundance, types, and polymer composition of microplastics, finding notable contamination levels that highlight the need for monitoring microplastic pollution in urban freshwater systems in developing regions.

Polymers

ABSTRACT Although microplastic (MP) pollution in various lakes worldwide has been mostly studied, research on natural urban lakes in the Kathmandu Valley is limited. To fill this gap, the study examined the abundance and characteristics of MP in the surface waters of Taudaha and Nagdaha Lakes. Samples were collected from the shoreline of both lakes in the rainy season. It was then subjected to filtration and density separation to isolate suspected MP particles. Morphological categorization was performed using a stereomicroscope. Polymer types were confirmed through Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy by matching spectra with those of previous researchers. FTIR identification is conducted only on larger‐sized particles (1000 µm). Results showed that MP was detected at every site in both lakes, with concentrations from 0.4 to 3.2 particles/L in Taudaha Lake (mean 1.64 ± 0.72 particles/L) and 0.8 to 12.4 particles/L in Nagdaha Lake (mean 4.45 ± 2.90 particles/L). MP concentrations in Nagdaha Lake were significantly higher than in Taudaha Lake. Morphological analysis revealed that MP concentrations were predominantly observed as fibers (Taudaha, 96% and Nagdaha, 91%), followed by fragments and film. MP was mostly blue and pink in color. Polymer detection was limited to only two types: polyethylene and polypropylene. MP pollution in such lakes can be mainly attributed to human activities such as restaurants, cloth washing, proximity to roads, and tourism. This study provides important baseline information for the future monitoring of urban lake ecosystems and points to directions for future environmental management.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic Pollution in Urban Lake Phewa, Nepal: The First Report on Abundance and Composition in Surface Water of Lake in Different Seasons

Researchers conducted the first survey of microplastics in Lake Phewa, a major freshwater lake in Nepal, finding plastic particles in surface water across all seasons. Fiber microplastics were most abundant, consistent with laundry and textile sources. This study provides baseline data for microplastic monitoring in Nepal, where freshwater microplastic research has been largely absent.

Article Tier 2

A study of microplastics in water and sediments of Lakes around Dhaka city

Researchers investigated microplastic presence, distribution, and characterization in water and sediment samples from four urban lakes in Dhaka City, Bangladesh (Dhanmondi, Hatirjheel, Gulshan, and Banani), characterizing particles by size, shape, and polymer type via visual identification and FTIR spectroscopy, contributing freshwater microplastic data from an underrepresented South Asian urban setting.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic pollution in urban Lake Phewa, Nepal: the first report on abundance and composition in surface water of lake in different seasons

Surface water from Lake Phewa, Nepal's second-largest lake, was analyzed for microplastics across seasons in the first such study from Nepal, finding plastics present in all samples with concentrations varying seasonally. The results establish a baseline for freshwater microplastic monitoring in a South Asian developing country context and raise concerns about impacts on a lake important for tourism and local livelihoods.

Article Tier 2

Detection and Characterization of Microplastics in Two Major Lakes of Nepal: Begnas and Phewa

This study provided some of the first evidence of microplastic contamination in two major Nepalese lakes, Begnas and Phewa, documenting the types, shapes, colors, and sources of particles found. The findings indicate that even high-altitude freshwater systems in Nepal are not immune to plastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic pollution in Kolavai Lake, Tamil Nadu, India: Quantification of plankton-sized microplastics in the surface water of lake

Researchers surveyed Kolavai Lake in Tamil Nadu, India, and found microplastics at an average of 6.1 particles per liter across the lake's surface water, with higher concentrations near urban and southern zones. The study used FTIR spectroscopy to confirm the chemical identity of particles and examined how microplastic abundance compares to zooplankton density, finding that microplastics were present at levels that could disrupt plankton feeding. These results highlight how even inland freshwater lakes in India are heavily contaminated, with implications for aquatic food chains and the communities that depend on this water.

Share this paper