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Plastic litter is a part of the carbon cycle in an urban river: Microplastic and macroplastic accumulate with organic matter in floating debris rafts

Water Environment Research 2024 16 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.
Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Fritz Petersen, Fritz Petersen, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Fritz Petersen, Fritz Petersen, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Bailey A. Schwenk, Timothy J. Hoellein Bailey A. Schwenk, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Elizabeth M. Kazmierczak, Elizabeth M. Kazmierczak, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Bailey A. Schwenk, Timothy J. Hoellein Fritz Petersen, Bailey A. Schwenk, Fritz Petersen, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein

Summary

Researchers measured both microplastic and macroplastic concentrations within floating debris rafts and open water in an urban river, quantifying plastic as carbon mass alongside organic matter. They found that macroplastics were exclusively associated with debris rafts, while microplastics occurred at higher concentrations in rafts than in open water. The study suggests that plastic litter represents a meaningful but often overlooked component of the carbon cycle in urban waterways.

Study Type Environmental

Watershed models of plastic export from rivers to oceans have large uncertainties, and improvements require direct measurements of riverine macroplastic (>5 mm) and microplastic (<5 mm). Also, plastic represents allochthonous carbon inputs to rivers but is rarely measured as carbon mass. We quantified plastic and organic matter within floating debris rafts and open water in an urban river. Macroplastics only occurred in debris rafts. Microplastics had higher concentrations in debris rafts relative to open water. Across sites, organic matter was positively correlated with microplastics and macroplastics. Last, carbon in plastic was 40% of the carbon mass in coarse particulate organic matter in debris rafts. Floating plastic litter accumulates with particulate organic matter in debris rafts. Plastic is an overlooked and ecological meaningful component of carbon standing stocks in urban rivers. Results will inform improved carbon budget calculation in rivers and watershed models of plastic export. PRACTITIONER POINTS: Plastic particles floating on the surface of an urban river accumulate in debris rafts compared to open water in terms of count and mass. Abundance and composition of plastic particles in debris rafts were distinct from those in open water areas. Plastic litter as units of carbon mass was in the same order of magnitude as carbon mass in course particulate organic matter. Plastic litter moves in similar ways to naturally occurring organic particles and should be measured as a part of the riverine carbon cycle.

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