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Interconnected impacts of water resource management and climate change on microplastic pollution and riverine biocoenosis: A review by freshwater ecologists

Journal of Environmental Management 2024 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Quadroni, Vanessa De Santis, Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Vanessa De Santis, Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Vanessa De Santis, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Silvia Galafassi Giulia Cesarini, Silvia Galafassi Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Vanessa De Santis, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Giulia Cesarini, Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Vanessa De Santis, Vanessa De Santis, Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Quadroni, Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi Silvia Galafassi

Summary

Researchers reviewed how river hydrology, water resource management, and climate change interact to influence microplastic pollution in freshwater ecosystems. They found that floods can flush microplastics from catchments, while reservoirs act as both sinks and sources, and extreme weather events driven by climate change tend to concentrate microplastics and threaten aquatic organisms. The study highlights a critical gap in research that jointly addresses these interconnected factors and calls for integrated policy approaches.

Study Type Environmental

The relationship between river hydrology and microplastic (MP) pollution is complex: increased discharge does not always mobilize more MPs, but floods can effectively flush out MPs from river catchments. Climate change and water resource management further influence MP pollution and its fate by altering river hydro-sedimentary regimes. This review investigates the interconnected impacts of these factors from a comprehensive perspective, focusing on how they affect MP concentration in freshwater ecosystems, particularly in regulated rivers and associated reservoirs. Our review reveals a scarcity of studies that jointly analyze the interrelated issues of MP pollution, water resource management, and climate change. Key findings indicate that variations in river discharge significantly influence MP mobilization, mainly depending on catchment land use, channel morphology, position within the catchment, and MP characteristics. Reservoirs function as both sinks and sources of MPs, underscoring their complex role in MP dynamics and the need for sustainable sediment management strategies. The increasing frequency of extreme weather events, driven by climate change, along with prolonged droughts intensified by water management practices, exacerbates MP pollution. These changes contribute to the local concentration of MPs, posing direct physical threats to aquatic organisms, particularly benthic species, through pollution and habitat alterations. Current policies on plastic pollution, water resources and climate change are underdeveloped, as these topics have been treated separately so far. In conclusion, this review provides perspectives on future research and policy directions to address challenges posed by MPs and to preserve rivers against multiple stressors.

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