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Occurrence, spatial distribution, and risk assessment of microplastics in surface water and sediments of Saint Martin Island in the Bay of Bengal
Summary
Researchers surveyed microplastic occurrence and spatial distribution in surface water and sediments around Saint Martin Island in the Bay of Bengal, identifying multiple morphological types including expanded polystyrene, foam, filaments, fragments, and fibers, and conducted risk assessments finding sediment concentrations of 3,166 particles/kg.
Microplastics (MPs) are emerging contaminants in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems and have caused substantial concern worldwide. This study surveyed the presence of MPs in surface water and sediments across the coastal area of Saint Martin Island in the Bay of Bengal. MPs were collected following the standard protocol and identified as various types like expanded polystyrene, foam, filaments, fragments, lines, fibers, and paint flakes. MPs pollution in beach sediment was 3166 particles/kg, varied from ¿1 to 413 particles/m2 of dry sediment and 0.95 particles/m3 with 2 to 19 particles/30 min trawl in coastal surface water samples. Most of the frequent MPs in beach sediments ranged from 1.0 to 2.0 mm, whereas the fragments were predominant in sediment and surface water samples. MPs distribution revealed that different shapes were dominant at different sites within the Island. The calculated pollution risk index due to the presence of MPs indicated that the sediment and surface water samples were under the low-risk category. However, polymeric risk assessment and contamination factors suggest that the coastline is significantly polluted, as high pollution load indices (PLI ¿1) were observed for sediments and coastal surface water samples. This work provides the detailed MPs data in the coastal environment of Saint Martin Island for the first time; hence it may be helpful to develop proper strategies to deal with environmental problems. Also see: https://micro2024.sciencesconf.org/545469/document
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