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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Food & Water Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

From source to sink: part 1—characterization and Lagrangian tracking of riverine microplastics in the Mediterranean Basin

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Lisa Weiss Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Lisa Weiss Mel Constant, Lisa Weiss Lisa Weiss Lisa Weiss Lisa Weiss Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Claude Estournel, Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Claude Estournel, Claude Estournel, Claude Estournel, Wolfgang Ludwig, Lisa Weiss Mel Constant, Lisa Weiss Mel Constant, Patrick Marsaleix, Lisa Weiss Lisa Weiss Patrick Marsaleix, Patrick Marsaleix, Guillaume Mikolajczak, Guillaume Mikolajczak, Lisa Weiss Wolfgang Ludwig, Guillaume Mikolajczak, Guillaume Mikolajczak, Lisa Weiss Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Mel Constant, Claude Estournel, Wolfgang Ludwig, Patrick Marsaleix, Wolfgang Ludwig, Mel Constant, Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Lisa Weiss Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Wolfgang Ludwig, Mel Constant, Wolfgang Ludwig, Lisa Weiss

Summary

Researchers characterized riverine microplastics from source to coastal sink, using Lagrangian tracking to trace the transport of particles from inland rivers to coastal deposition zones and identifying key retention points in the system.

Study Type Environmental

The Mediterranean Sea is one of the most critically polluted areas due to its semi-enclosed structure and its highly anthropized shoreline. Rivers are significant vectors for pollutant transfers from the continental to the marine environment. In this context, a 3D Lagrangian simulation of the dispersion of riverine microplastics (MPs) was performed, which included the application of a recently developed model that reassessed the MP fluxes discharged by rivers. MP physical properties from river samples were further investigated to approximate vertical displacement in modeled ocean currents. The use of a high-resolution circulation model, integrating Stokes drift, turbulent diffusion, and MP sinking and rising velocities, enabled us to establish stock balances. Our simulation suggested that 65% of river inputs may be made of floating MPs drifting in the surface layer and 35% of dense MPs sinking to deeper layers. The Eastern Mediterranean tends to accumulate floating MPs, primarily originating from the Western Mediterranean Basin, where major river sources are concentrated. After 2 years of simulation, modeled stranding sequestered 90% of the MP inputs, indicating relatively short average residence times from a few days to months at most for particles at sea. Although spatial distribution patterns stabilized after this period and a steady state may have been approached, the surface concentrations we modeled generally remained below field observations. This suggested either an underestimation of sources (rivers and unaccounted sources), by a factor of 6 at most, or an overestimation of MP withdrawal through stranding, to be reduced from 90 to around 60% or less if unaccounted sinks were considered.

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