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Detection Methods
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Vertical distribution of microplastics in the Western Pacific Warm Pool: In situ results comparison of different sampling method
Journal of Hazardous Materials2024
13 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 50
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Researchers explored microplastic pollution at different ocean depths in the Western Pacific Warm Pool, comparing results from two different sampling methods used simultaneously. They found discrepancies between CTD water samplers and large-volume in-situ filtration systems, highlighting the methodological challenges of deep-sea microplastic research. The study provides new data on the vertical distribution of microplastics in a poorly studied region of the open ocean.
Marine microplastics (MPs) are recognized as a growing severe environmental concern. The vertical distribution pattern of MPs in the ocean is still elusive. Meanwhile, different sampling methods have been deployed in previous studies, resulting in difficulties in compiling data. In this study, for the first time, we explored ocean interior MP pollution in the Western Pacific Warm Pool simultaneously using both a CTD (Conductivity-temperature-depth) sampler and a large-volume in-situ filtration system. At the same sampling station, the average abundance of microplastics in the water column obtained by the two sampling methods was 0.37 ± 0.44 n/m (in-situ filtration) and 115.12 ± 64.13 n/m (CTD), respectively, which showed significant differences. Both methods found that the main chemical composition and shape of MPs were PET and fiber. Ocean current was identified as the dominant factor that impacted the horizontal distribution of MPs in the study area. The abundance of MPs in the surface layer was 5.4-703.8 times higher than that of the water column. The similar physical and chemical properties of MPs in the surface water and water column indicated that MPs in the water column originate from the sustained release from the surface layer.