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A review of microplastic transport in coastal zones

Marine Environmental Research 2024 27 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Jianhao Jiang, Lulu He, Shiwei Zheng, Junping Liu, Lixin Gong

Summary

This review summarizes the sources, distribution, and movement patterns of microplastics in coastal zones around the world. Researchers found that microplastic transport is driven by waves, tides, currents, and biological processes like biofouling, and that coastal areas serve as both accumulation zones and pathways for microplastics moving between land and open ocean. The study highlights significant knowledge gaps in understanding how microplastics behave in these dynamic environments.

Transport of microplastics (MPs) in coastal zones is influenced not only by their own characteristics, but also by the hydrodynamic conditions and coastal environment. In this article, we first summarized the source, distribution and abundance of MPs in coastal zones around the world through the induction of in-situ observation literature, and then comprehensively reviewed the different transports of MPs in coastal zones, including sedimentation, vertical mixing, resuspension, drift and biofouling. Afterwards, we conducted a comparative analysis of relevant experimental literature, and found that the current experimental research on microplastic transport mainly focused on the settling velocity under static water and the transport distribution under dynamic water. Based on the relevant literature on numerical simulation of microplastic transport in coastal zones, it was also found that the Euler-Lagrange method is the most widely used. The main influencing factor in the Euler method is hydrodynamic, while the Lagrange method and Euler-Lagrange method is hydrodynamic and microplastic particle characteristics. Tides in hydrodynamics are mentioned the most frequently, and the role of turbulence in almost all the literature. The density of MPs is the most influencing factor on transport results, followed by size, while shape is only studied in small-scale models. Some literature has also found that the influence of biofilms is mainly reflected in the changes in the density and size of MPs.

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