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Differentiation of petro-sourced plastic microfilaments from organic microfilaments by SEM-EDX in environmental samples

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2024 5 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.
Lovasoa Rina Raharinaivo, Lovasoa Rina Raharinaivo, Antoine Batigny, Antoine Batigny, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Rosica Mincheva, Rosica Mincheva, Rosica Mincheva, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Carla Bittencourt, Jean‐Marie Raquez Carla Bittencourt, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Tiandrainy Gédice Fernand Maherizo, Tiandrainy Gédice Fernand Maherizo, Gildas Boleslas Georges Todinanahary, Gildas Boleslas Georges Todinanahary, Jean‐Marie Raquez Thierry Lavitra, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Igor Eeckhaut, Jean‐Marie Raquez Igor Eeckhaut, Jean‐Marie Raquez

Summary

Researchers developed methods to differentiate petrochemical-sourced plastic microfilaments from natural and biogenic fibers in environmental samples, improving the accuracy of microplastic identification. The approach reduces misclassification errors that have complicated comparisons across monitoring studies.

Quantifying microplastics (MPs) in marine environments is challenging due to the complexities of differentiation from other materials. This study aims to distinguish petro-sourced plastic microfilaments from organic ones in environmental samples using scanning electron microscope coupled with energy dispersive X-ray (SEM-EDX) analysis. Therefore, 38 particles resembling MPs (PRMPs) from sediments and organisms in Madagascar were analyzed. MPs identification thresholds were determined from SEM-EDX analysis of macroplastics and seaweed, the primary sources of microfilaments. SEM-EDX results of the 38 PRMPs were compared with identification/misidentification made by five MPs observation experts. Results indicated that a carbon/oxygen (C/O) ratio >1 distinguished macroplastics and MPs from other sources (seaweed and organic microfilaments). SEM-EDX analysis identified 81.58% of PRMPs as MPs. The average error made by one observer was 36.32%. These findings highlight the need for a method to assess identification error in MPs quantification and recommend SEM-EDX analysis of microfilaments to gauge observer error.

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