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Monitoring of contamination by microplastics on sandy beaches at Vulcano Island (Sicily, Italy) by hyperspectral imaging

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2024 12 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.
Giuseppe Bonifazi Pietro Cocozza, Silvia Serranti, Pietro Cocozza, Giuseppe Bonifazi Pietro Cocozza, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Paola Cucuzza, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Pietro Cocozza, Pietro Cocozza, Pietro Cocozza, Giuseppe Bonifazi Pietro Cocozza, Silvia Serranti, Andrea Setini, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Pietro Cocozza, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Paola Cucuzza, Giuseppe Bonifazi Pietro Cocozza, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Paola Cucuzza, Paola Cucuzza, Paola Cucuzza, Andrea Setini, Andrea Setini, Pietro Cocozza, Andrea Setini, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Paola Cucuzza, Paola Cucuzza, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Andrea Setini, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Andrea Setini, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi

Summary

Researchers monitored microplastic contamination on two sandy beaches at Vulcano Island, Sicily, using hyperspectral imaging for polymer identification. They found concentrations ranging from 0.27 to 1.35 particles per kilogram of dry sand, with fragments being the most common category and polyethylene and polypropylene the dominant polymer types. The study employed automated image analysis to characterize morphological attributes of the microplastics and assessed potential emission sources.

Study Type Environmental

In this work, the monitoring and characterization of large microplastics (1-5 mm) collected from sandy beaches of Vulcano Island (Aeolian Islands, Sicily, Italy) were carried out for the first time. Microplastics were sampled from two beaches, "Gelso" and "Sabbie Nere," in three different time periods. The following characteristics of microplastic samples were assessed: quantity, distribution, categories, color, polymer type, size, and shape parameters. The polymers were identified using hyperspectral imaging, whereas an automatic image analysis approach was employed to determine microplastics' morphological and morphometrical attributes. Finally, the microplastic diversity integrated index was computed to obtain information on the potential emission sources of microplastics. It was found that the concentration of microplastics varies from 0.27 particles/kg_dw to 1.35 particles/kg_dw with fragment being the main collected category, with minor amount of pellet, foam, film, and filament. The predominant color of microplastics was by far white, followed by blue and yellow. The identified polymers were polyethylene and polypropylene followed by expanded polystyrene, polyamide, polystyrene, and polyethylene terephthalate. The morphological and morphometrical characterization highlighted a large variability for most size and shape parameters. Finally, the Microplastics Diversity Integrated Index results showed average indices compared to the literature, with higher values for the "Gelso" site (0.656), indicating a higher heterogeneity of sources, with respect to "Sabbie Nere" beach (0.530).

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