0
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 Sign in to save

Microplastic concentration, characterization, and size distribution in the Delaware Bay estuary

Chemosphere 2024 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Erik J Nitzberg, Nicole Fahrenfeld Swaraj Parmar, Nicole Fahrenfeld Erik J Nitzberg, Erik J Nitzberg, Swaraj Parmar, Erik J Nitzberg, Swaraj Parmar, Swaraj Parmar, Swaraj Parmar, Swaraj Parmar, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Erik J Nitzberg, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Swaraj Parmar, Swaraj Parmar, Swaraj Parmar, Swaraj Parmar, Erik J Nitzberg, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Nicole Fahrenfeld Robert J. Chant, Robert J. Chant, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Grace Saba, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Grace Saba, Robert J. Chant, Grace Saba, Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Nicole Fahrenfeld Robert J. Chant, Robert J. Chant, Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Robert J. Chant, Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Nicole Fahrenfeld Georgia Arbuckle‐Keil, Grace Saba, Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld Nicole Fahrenfeld

Summary

Researchers measured microplastic concentrations and composition in the Delaware Bay estuary across two sampling campaigns. The study found that polyethylene and polypropylene were the dominant polymer types, and the highest microplastic levels were observed near visible debris along frontal zones, suggesting that estuarine dynamics play an important role in shaping microplastic distribution.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic (MP) pollution has been widely reported across water matrices including in estuaries, which are important for the understanding of oceanic MPs. Estuaries can greatly alter the fate, transport, size distribution, and abundance of plastic pollution. The aim of this study was to quantify and characterize MP pollution in the Delaware Bay estuary USA, including the size distribution. Samples (N = 31) were collected from the mouth of the Delaware River to the coastal ocean including multiple frontal zones across two sampling campaigns (2019 and 2022). MP were extracted from the collected particles using wet peroxide oxidation and density separation with saturated sodium chloride. Particles collected on 500 μm mesh sieves were analyzed via Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Across all samples, 324 of the 1015 particles analyzed were MP, and 11 macroplastics were observed. MP concentrations ranged from below detection to 4.12 MP/m (mean 0.34 ± 0.80 MP/m). No significant differences were observed between sampling sites; nonetheless, the two highest MP concentrations were observed when sampling along frontal zones with visible debris including macroplastics. Polyethylene (53%) and polypropylene (43%) were the most abundant polymers observed. The majority of the non-plastic particles were classified as particulate natural organic matter (82% of non-plastics). Particles from samples collected during 2022 (N = 864) also had color, morphology, and two size dimensions recorded. MP particle size was significantly associated with sampling site, with the coastal ocean sampling site generally having the smallest MPs. A correlation between total post-extraction particles and total plastic particles was observed. Aspect ratios for the plastics ranged from one to 40.7, with larger ratios for fibers, with a mean (±standard deviation) of 3.39 ± 4.72 (unitless). These aspect ratios can be used to select shape factors used to estimate the total volume of MP in the studied size range. Overall, these results can help inform fate, transport, and risk assessments related to estuarine plastic pollution.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper