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Trapping of microplastics and other anthropogenic particles in seagrass beds: Ubiquity across a vertical and horizontal sampling gradient

Marine Environmental Research 2024 12 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.
Janine Ledet, Janine Ledet, Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Chloe Tan, Chloe Tan, Clara Lei Xin Yong, Clara Lei Xin Yong, Peter A. Todd Clara Lei Xin Yong, Clara Lei Xin Yong, Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Xing Hua Guan, Xing Hua Guan, Xing Hua Guan, Xing Hua Guan, Clara Lei Xin Yong, Clara Lei Xin Yong, Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Lynette Ying, Lynette Ying, Lynette Ying, Clara Lei Xin Yong, Lynette Ying, Janine Ledet, Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd Peter A. Todd

Summary

Researchers examined how seagrass beds trap microplastics and other anthropogenic particles by sampling along a vegetation cover gradient from dense beds to less vegetated patches. The study found that seagrass vegetation enhances the accumulation of plastic debris in both sediment and among plant structures. Evidence indicates that seagrass ecosystems act as significant sinks for microplastic pollution, with implications for the organisms that depend on these habitats.

Study Type Environmental

Seagrass beds can trap large amounts of marine debris leading to areas of accumulation, known as 'sinks', of anthropogenic particles. While the presence of vegetation can enhance accumulation, less is known about how the trapping effect changes from vegetated to less vegetated patches. To test this, vegetation and sediment were sampled along a vegetation percent cover gradient from the centre of seagrass beds to nearby less vegetated patches. To determine whether trapped particles can lead to increased accumulation in associated fauna, gastropods were also collected from the transects laid across this gradient. Extracted anthropogenic particles were counted and characterised. Particles were detected in all sample types and reached quantifiable limits in at least 50% of sediment and gastropod samples. There was no significant difference in the distribution of particles found in seagrass beds compared to less vegetated patches, suggesting other factors contribute to the trapping efficiency of biogenic habitats besides simply the presence or absence of vegetation.

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