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Comparison of Lichen and Moss Transplants for Monitoring the Deposition of Airborne Microfibers

Sustainability 2025 4 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.
Mehriban Jafarova, Mehriban Jafarova, Stefano Loppi, Mehriban Jafarova, Mehriban Jafarova, Mehriban Jafarova, Lisa Grifoni, Julian Aherne Lisa Grifoni, Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Mehriban Jafarova, Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Mehriban Jafarova, Mehriban Jafarova, Lisa Grifoni, Stefano Loppi, Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Lisa Grifoni, Noelia S. La Colla, Noelia S. La Colla, Julian Aherne Stefano Loppi, Julian Aherne Julian Aherne Stefano Loppi, Stefano Loppi, Julian Aherne Stefano Loppi, Alessio Raulli, Alessio Raulli, Julian Aherne Stefano Loppi, Julian Aherne Stefano Loppi, Stefano Loppi, Stefano Loppi, Stefano Loppi, Stefano Loppi, Julian Aherne Stefano Loppi, Julian Aherne

Summary

Researchers compared lichen and moss transplants as tools for monitoring airborne microfiber pollution across urban sites in Italy. They found that lichens accumulated significantly more microfibers than mosses and were better at detecting differences between locations. The study suggests that lichen transplants offer a more effective and accessible biomonitoring approach for tracking airborne microplastic contamination in cities.

Interest in using lichens and mosses to monitor airborne microplastics is growing, but few studies have thoroughly compared their effectiveness as biomonitors. Here, we directly compare the ability of lichen and moss transplants collected from a rural area to accumulate microfibers (MFs) and Potentially Toxic Elements (PTEs) under the same deployment conditions. Transplants (n = 60; triplicates for both lichen and moss) were co-deployed on tree branches across a range of urban exposure sites (e.g., commercial and residential areas and urban parks) for 77 days in Siena, Italy. The results showed that both biomonitors accumulated similar amounts of MFs, in terms of counts and on a mass basis, but when expressed on a surface area basis, lichens showed significantly higher values. Irrespective of the metric, lichen and moss MF accumulation data were strongly correlated. In contrast, there was no correlation between MFs and PTEs, suggesting that their sources were different. MFs accumulated by lichen and moss transplants were dominated by polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and polypropylene polymers, suggesting that the main source of airborne MFs is synthetic textiles. Our results suggest that both lichen and moss transplants can be effectively used as low-cost monitors of atmospheric MFs in urban areas in support of the sustainable development goal of clean air.

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