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Microplastic pollution in different environmental matrices of Tyrrhenian Sea' marine caves
Summary
Researchers investigated microplastic pollution across multiple matrices including water, sediment, and biota within Tyrrhenian Sea marine caves, quantifying anthropogenic pressures in this previously unstudied habitat and providing data to inform conservation and protection of these biodiversity hotspot environments.
Microplastic (MP) pollution has been detected in many habitats of the marine ecosystem, but it was never studied in marine caves before a few years ago. Investigating the marine caves for the MP's presence in different matrices (water, sediment, and biota) could be useful to quantify the anthropogenic pressures in this habitat and provide useful indications for their protection and conservation. Marine caves have widely variable shapes and sizes due to changing geological and geomorphological characteristics and are affected by wide spatial and temporal environmental variability and/or extreme conditions. Due to this high environmental variability, they are biodiversity hot spots and refuge habitats. However, they are particularly vulnerable to pollution because, due to the enclosed conditions and scarce water exchange, pollutants may remain in the water, stored in the sediments, and incorporated by living organisms. To date, three caves in the Tyrrhenian Sea with very different characteristics have been studied for microplastic pollution: Bue Marino (Sardinia), Argentarola (Tuscany), and Ficarella (Sicily). MPs have been detected in water and sediments and also in the shells of sediment-dwelling single-celled organisms (benthic foraminifera). Results highlighted MPs in all the cave sediments: Argentarola (7.8 ± 3.6 items/kg), Bue Marino (17.2 ± 7.7 items/kg), and Ficarella (39.3 ± 40.8 items/kg). In all cases, MPs are mostly fragments and fibers Also see: https://micro2024.sciencesconf.org/559407/document