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Comparison of microplastic abundance and characteristics in rural rivers : Hamada River, Japan and Mlese River, Indonesia

IOP Conference Series Earth and Environmental Science 2024 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Widyastuti Kusuma Wardhani, Pertiwi Andarani, Kuriko Yokota, Nguyễn Minh Ngọc, S Sudarno, S Syafrudin, Takanobu Inoue

Summary

Researchers compared microplastic abundance and characteristics between rural rivers in Hamadan Province, Iran, measuring particle concentrations, types, and seasonal variation. Urban agricultural activities were identified as major sources, with fiber microplastics dominating.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Abstract Microplastics have negative chemical and ecological effects on aquatic biota and humans. However, few studies have explored the abundance of microplastic in rural river. This study aims to compare of the abundance of microplastic, size distribution, color, and polymer types in rural river of Japan and Indonesia. Data were collected at one of river point in the in the Hamada River, Japan during dry season and Mlese River, Indonesia during rainy season. The sampling and analysis methods were in accordance with the Japanese Riverine Microplastic Survey Guidelines, the microplastics in the range of 500-5,000 μm were determined by optical microscopy and FTIR spectroscopy. Film shaped, size 1,000-3,000 μm, and polymer type polyethylene and polypropylene were the majority of the identified microplastics both in Hamada River and Mlese River. Meanwhile, the dominated colors were gray for Hamada River and transparent for Mlese River. The abundance of microplastic were 5.5×10 −2 particles/m 3 (discharge:0.032 m 3 /s) for Hamada River and 2.2×10 −3 particles/m 3 (discharge:8.12 m 3 /s) for Mlese River. A low abundance of microplastic in Mlese River is a result of the high flow velocity and discharge. Moreover, that shows Hamada River’s microplastic is 26 times greater, this indicates that Japan uses more plastic products to support crop production compared to Indonesia and influence the river water pollution by microplastics.

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