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 Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Microplastic pollution calls for urgent investigations in stygobiont habitats: A case study from Classical karst

Journal of Environmental Management 2024 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Matteo Galbiati, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Matteo Galbiati, Rossana Bellopede, Valentina Balestra, Rossana Bellopede, Matteo Galbiati, Valentina Balestra, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Stefano Lapadula, Stefano Lapadula, Veronica Zampieri, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Valentina Balestra, Veronica Zampieri, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Filippomaria Cassarino, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Valentina Balestra, Rossana Bellopede, Filippomaria Cassarino, Filippomaria Cassarino, Filippomaria Cassarino, Rossana Bellopede, Gentile Francesco Ficetola Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Magdalena Gajdošová, Magdalena Gajdošová, Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Benedetta Barzaghi, Rossana Bellopede, Benedetta Barzaghi, Rossana Bellopede, Raoul Manenti, Raoul Manenti, Gentile Francesco Ficetola Gentile Francesco Ficetola Rossana Bellopede, Rossana Bellopede, Gentile Francesco Ficetola Gentile Francesco Ficetola

Summary

Researchers examined microplastic pollution in karst cave systems in the Classical Karst region, finding that these underground habitats harbor significant contamination. The study suggests that vulnerable cave-dwelling species may be consuming microplastics, which could undermine conservation efforts for protected groundwater ecosystems and the species that depend on them.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastic pollution in karst systems is still poorly studied, despite the presence of protected species and habitats, and important water reserves. Vulnerable key species hosted in these habitats could consume or assimilate microplastics, which can irreversibly damage management efforts, and thus ecosystems functionality. This can be particularly true for subterranean water habitats where microplastic pollution effects on wildlife management programs are not considered. The aim of this study is to provide a case study from the Classical Karst Region, which hosts peculiar habitats and key species protected at European level, such as the olm Proteus anguinus. As this area has been deeply exploited and modified over time, and is adjacent to highways, roads and railways, which could contribute to pollution within the karst system, threatening the ecosystems, it provides a perfect model system. In this study we collected and investigated water and sediment samples from aquatic environments of surface and subterranean habitats hosting several subterranean environment-adapted organisms. Examined particles were counted and characterized by size, color and shape via visual identification under a microscope, with and without UV light. Furthermore, spectroscopic analyses were carried out in order to identify microplastics typology. Microplastics were found in all examined habitats. In water, microplastics concentration ranged from 37 to 86 items/L, in sediments from 776 to 2064 items/kg. Fibre-shape was the main present, followed by fragments and beads, suggesting multiple sources of pollution, especially textile products. Most of the particles were fluorescent under UV light and were mainly transparent, while not-fluorescent ones were especially black, blue or brown. Samples contained especially polyesters and copolymers. These results highlight intense MP pollution in karst areas, with significant impacts on water quality, and potential effects on subterranean environment-dwelling species. We stress the importance of monitoring pollution in these critical environments for biodiversity and habitat conservation: monitoring in karst areas must become a priority for habitat and species protection, and water resources management, improving analyses on a larger number of aquatic surface and subterranean habitats.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper