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Navigating the difference of riverine microplastic movement footprint into the sea: Particle properties influence

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Yichuan Zeng, Yichuan Zeng, Hua Wang, Dongfang Liang, Weihao Yuan, Siqiong Li, Haosen Xu, Jingwei Chen

Summary

Researchers mapped how different types of microplastic particles move from the Yangtze River into the sea based on their size, shape, and polymer type. They found that particle properties strongly influence transport patterns, with lighter and smaller particles traveling farther into the ocean while heavier ones settle near the estuary. The study provides a framework for predicting where different microplastics end up after leaving river systems.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

As a critical source of marine microplastics (MPs), estuarine MPs community varied in movement due to particle diversity, while tide and runoff further complicated their transport. In this study, a particle mass gradient that represents MPs in the surface layer of the Yangtze River estuary was established. This was done by calculating the masses of 16 particle types using the particle size probability density function (PDF), with typical shapes and polymers as classifiers. Further, Aschenbrenner shape factor and polymer density were embedded into drag coefficients to categorically trace MP movement footprints. Results revealed that the MPs in North Branch moved northward and the MPs in South Branch moved southeastward in a spiral oscillation until they left the model boundary under Changjiang Diluted Water front and the northward coastal currents. Low-density fibrous MPs are more likely to move into the open ocean and oscillate more than films, with a single PE fiber trajectory that reached a maximum oscillatory width of 16.7 km. Over 95 % of the PVC fiber particles settled in nearshore waters west of 122.5°E. Elucidating the aggregation and retention of different MPs types can provide more accurate environmental baseline reference for more precise MP exposure levels and risk dose of ingestion for marine organisms.

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