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Microplastic atmospheric pollution in an urban Southern Brazil region: What can spider webs tell us?

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Mércia Barcellos da Costa, João Marcos Schuab, Cristina Maria Dos Santos Sad, Enrique R. Yapuchura, Mariana Beatriz Paz Otegui, Daniel Gosser Motta, Karina Machado Menezes, Felipe Barcellos Caniçali, Antônio Augusto Lopes Marins, Gustavo Zambon Dalbó, Mateus Marçal, Bruno Fioresi Paqueli, Gabriela Carvalho Zamprogno

Summary

Researchers used spider webs as a passive sampling tool to monitor airborne microplastic pollution across urban areas in southern Brazil. They found microplastics in webs from all sampling locations, with fibers being the most common type, reflecting contributions from synthetic textiles. The study demonstrates that spider webs can serve as a simple and effective method for tracking atmospheric microplastic contamination in cities.

The World Health Organization categorizes air pollution as the presence of one or more contaminants in the atmosphere such as smoke, dust, and particulate matter like microplastics, which are considered a priority pollutant. However, only a few studies have been developed on atmospheric pollution, and knowledge about MPs in the atmosphere is still limited. Spider webs have been tested and used as a passive sampling approach to study anthropogenic pollution. Despite this, studies on microplastic contamination using spiderwebs as samplers are scarce. Thus, this study uses spider webs as passive indicators to investigate air quality regarding microplastic contamination in an urbanized area. Therefore, 30 sampling points were selected, and webs of Nephilingis cruentata were collected. The spider webs were dipped in KOH 10 %. After digestion, the solution was washed and sieved through a 90 µm geological sieve. The remaining material was transferred to a Petri dish with filter paper, quantified, and identified by type and color. The chemical composition of the polymers was determined using Raman spectroscopy. 3138 microplastics were identified (2973 filaments and 165 fragments). The most frequent colors were blue and black. Raman spectroscopy revealed five types of polymers: Isotactic Polypropylene, Polyethylene Terephthalate, Polyurethane, Polyamide, and Direct Polyethylene.

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