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Detection of small microplastics in the surface freshwater samples of Yangcheng Lake, China

Heliyon 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Zhenyu Xu, Natalie Earnhardt, Domna G. Kotsifaki

Summary

Using optical confocal micro-Raman tweezers, researchers identified 136 small microplastics (under 20 µm) among 514 particles analyzed in 15 surface water sites around Yangcheng Lake, China, with polystyrene dominating at 63% of detected particles.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics up to 20 μm are recognized as having the highest potential to cause significant impacts on aquatic environments. Current methods face challenges in detecting and chemically characterizing small microplastics in freshwater systems. In this study, using an optical confocal micro-Raman tweezer technique, the composition of particles trapped in lake aggregates collected from surface water around Yangcheng Lake in Suzhou, China, has been identified. Surface freshwater samples were analyzed from 15 different sites around the lake. In total, 514 particles were analyzed of which 136 were small microplastics. Chemical characterization showed the presence of five different polymer types, with polystyrene being the most dominant, accounting for 63% of the detected particles. Small plastics in the range of 1.1 to 8.5 μm were detected around crab restaurants and residential villages. The smallest microplastics identified were 1.1 μm polystyrene. Fragment was the most common shape of microplastics, followed by fiber and quasisphere within the volume of sample analyzed. The results suggest that the primary sources of small microplastic contamination in Yangcheng Lake may include fishing activities, agriculture, and tourism. Study findings may be used as a reference to extend the understanding of the small microplastic contamination level in inland freshwater systems.

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