0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

A numerical model of microplastic erosion, transport, and deposition for fluvial systems

2024
John Armitage, Sébastien Rohais

Summary

Researchers developed a reduced-complexity numerical model of microplastic erosion, transport, and deposition in fluvial systems, building on sediment transport methods and applying it to the Têt River in France where outlet flux monitoring data were available. The model found that matching observed fluxes required 1-10 ppm volume concentration of microplastic in the top 0.5 meters of soil, and predicted that a large proportion of microplastics become trapped in river sediments rather than reaching the ocean.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Rivers are the primary pathway of microplastic pollution from source to the eventual sink in the marine environment. However, like sediments, microplastic will become trapped within the fluvial system as it makes its way from source-to-sink. There is therefore the potential that rivers are an important reservoir of microplastic pollution globally. To explore the transport of microplastic through the fluvial system we develop a reduced complexity model of microplastic erosion, transport, and deposition that builds on methods developed for the transport of sediment. We apply this model to the river Têt, France, where there has been punctual monitoring of the flux of microplastic at the outlet. We find that the reduced complexity model captures the observed quantity of microplastic under reasonable assumptions of the relationship between microplastic sources and population density. The model that best matches observed fluxes of microplastic at the outlet of the Têt river requires between 1 and 10 ppm volume concentration of microplastic per 200×200 m in the top half a meter of soil. The microplastic of grain size 300 μm then travels within the river network with a settling velocity of the order of 10 -4 m/sec. The model results imply that a large proportion of microplastic will become entrained within the sediments along the fluvial system. This model is a first step in assessing where to sample for microplastic pollution within fluvial systems and points to regions susceptible to microplastic pollution.

Share this paper